Saturday, June 29, 2013

Cher: Tom Cruise was one of my top 5 lovers

Celebs

7 hours ago

IMAGE: Cher

Rob Kim / Getty Images

Cher says Tom Cruise makes her list of best lovers.

They're both famous names, but did you forget Cher and Tom Cruise were once an item? The singer, 67, confessed on Bravo's "Watch What Happens Live" Thursday that she still ranks the movie star, who's now 50, among her top 5 lovers.

"He wasn't a Scientologist then!" Cher told host Andy Cohen. "It was pretty hot and heavy for a little minute."

Cher and Cruise dated in the mid-1980s when he was in his early 20s, before his first marriage to actress Mimi Rogers, who reportedly introduced the actor to Scientology.

When Cohen asked Cher to name her all-time best lover, she stumbled, saying "well, a lot of them kinda came in first. I've had just the greatest lovers ever."

When asked where Cruise ranked, she was quick to say, "Well he ... was in the top five."

Cohen showed Cher a number of photos of famous people, including Cruise and asked her to say the first thing that came to her mind about each one.

Elvis Presley, Cher said, invited her to stay with him once for a weekend, and she refused, "but I wish I'd gone," she said. Of "Moonstruck" co-star Nicolas Cage, Cher said, "Aw, I love him. But he's crazy!" Of producer Phil Spector, she said "he paid me $25 for a year's work. My mother didn't believe I was working." Of Michael Jackson, she hesitated, saying "I have too much information."

Cher will appear on TODAY Monday with Savannah Guthrie, and is scheduled to reveal some big news in advance of her comeback album, "Closer to the Truth," which hits stores in September.

Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/cher-tom-cruise-was-one-my-top-5-lovers-6C10486630

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Friday, June 28, 2013

Ranker, ?The World's Ranking Platform', Raises $2M From Lowercase And Others

ranker logoRanker, a startup that asks users to "vote on the best and worst of everything," is announcing that it has raised $2 million in new funding. If you visit the Ranker site, you'll basically be overwhelmed with crowdsourced lists, like this list of the funniest movies of all-time (I agree with the top choice, but The Hangover at number two??? Madness!) and this one highlighting the best sulfate free shampoos (I'm not even sure what that means).

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

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Pujols lifts Angels over Tigers 3-1 in 10 innings

DETROIT (AP) ? Albert Pujols got the biggest hit of the game. Jered Weaver delivered the most encouraging performance, as far as the Los Angeles were concerned.

Pujols hit a tiebreaking double in the 10th inning and the Angels beat Detroit 3-1 on Thursday for their ninth straight victory over the Tigers.

Mike Trout had four hits and was in the middle of the decisive rally for the Angels, who completed a three-game sweep. Weaver pitched seven strong innings in a tight duel with Detroit right-hander Doug Fister.

"Just wanted to concentrate on keeping things simple and keeping the mechanics sound and tried to locate," said Weaver, the staff ace who had struggled since coming off the disabled list.

Making his sixth start since returning from a broken left (non-throwing) elbow, Weaver gave up one run and four hits. He walked two and struck out six.

After the Tigers scored in the second, Weaver allowed only a hit and a walk in his final five innings. He retired his last 13 batters.

"We're confident that he's going to pitch more like he did today than the way he has in a couple of his last starts," Angels manager Mike Scioscia said.

J.B. Shuck singled leading off the 10th against Phil Coke (0-5) and went to third on Trout's single to right field. Pujols sent a drive to deep center, where Austin Jackson tried to make a difficult catch with his back to home plate.

The ball tipped off the webbing of Jackson's glove, hit the wall and trickled to the ground.

"That ball was crushed," Scioscia said.

After an intentional walk to Howie Kendrick loaded the bases, Josh Hamilton made it 3-1 with a sacrifice fly.

"The Pujols pitch wasn't a bad pitch. I think that maybe it wasn't the right pitch in that particular moment," Coke said. "I didn't feel like I made the perfect pitch to him by any means, but the last thing I thought he was going to do is hit it as far as he did. It was away from him. I looked at where (catcher Brayan) Pena was set up and he was going away from Pujols with his glove, going away to receive the ball. He found it with his barrel."

Kevin Jepsen (1-2) worked a scoreless ninth for the win and Ernesto Frieri got three outs for his 19th save in 21 chances.

Neither team could do much against the starters.

Scott Downs replaced Weaver and set down the leadoff man in the eighth. But Downs then allowed Omar Infante's pinch-hit double and hit Jackson with a pitch. Downs was pulled for Michael Kohn, who struck out former Angel Torii Hunter and Miguel Cabrera, both swinging, to end the inning.

"Having a situation with Torii, as clutch as they come, and then you've got the best hitter in the league up next," Scioscia said. "What he did to get out of that eighth inning was huge."

Fister yielded one run and seven hits in seven innings, walking one and striking out four. After the Angels tied the game in the fourth, he gave up only one hit in his final three innings and didn't allow a runner past second.

"He did a tremendous job. The fact that he was able to contain that offense, that shows that he's a good pitcher," Pena said. "He kept us in the ballgame and he gave us a chance to win the ballgame. That's what you ask. He pitched beautifully."

Fister was relieved by Al Alburquerque, who pitched a scoreless eighth. The Angels got runners to second and third with two outs in the ninth against Joaquin Benoit, but he struck out Erick Aybar swinging at a 3-2 pitch to get out of the jam.

Detroit took a 1-0 lead in the second on Brayan Pena's two-out RBI single. It scored Victor Martinez, who singled with one out and went to second when Jhonny Peralta followed with a single.

Los Angeles tied it in the fourth on three consecutive singles to start the inning. Brad Hawpe's single to right scored Hamilton from third. Alberto Callaspo was thrown out at third by Hunter on the play.

NOTES: Los Angeles placed RHP Tommy Hanson on the 15-day disabled list. Hanson was scratched from his scheduled start Wednesday night when he felt tightness in his right forearm while warming up in the bullpen. Scioscia said Hanson (4-2, 5.10 ERA) would have an MRI on Thursday. The team recalled LHP Michael Roth from Double-A Arkansas. ... Detroit RHP Anibal Sanchez, on the 15-day DL with a right shoulder strain, threw to batters before the game. ... Cabrera is the sixth player since 1920 with 1,200 RBIs and 300 home runs in his first 11 seasons. The others were Hank Aaron, Ted Williams, Joe DiMaggio, Jeff Bagwell and Pujols. ... Cabrera went 1 for 4 on Thursday to extend his hitting streak to 12 games, which tied a season high. ... The Tigers begin a three-series road swing this weekend at Tampa Bay. Max Scherzer looks to run his record to 12-0 on Friday night when he faces Alex Colome (1-0, 0.00 ERA). ... The Angels head for Houston, where Jerome Williams (5-3, 3.36) will oppose Astros RHP Bud Norris (5-7, 3.60).

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pujols-lifts-angels-over-tigers-3-1-10-210840986.html

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This Climate Fix Might Be Decades Ahead Of Its Time

Global Thermostat's pilot plant in Menlo Park, Calif., pulls carbon dioxide from the surrounding air. The next challenge is to find uses for the captured gas.

Courtesy of Global Thermostat

Global Thermostat's pilot plant in Menlo Park, Calif., pulls carbon dioxide from the surrounding air. The next challenge is to find uses for the captured gas.

Courtesy of Global Thermostat

Every year, people add 30 billion tons of carbon dioxide to the air, mostly by burning fossil fuels. That's contributing to climate change. A few scientists have been dreaming about ways to pull some of that CO2 out of the air, but face stiff skepticism and major hurdles. This is the story of one scientist who's pressing ahead.

Peter Eisenberger is a distinguished professor of earth and environmental sciences at Columbia University. Earlier in his career, he ran the university's famed Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory and founded Columbia's Earth Institute. He was never one of those scientists who tinkered into the night on inventions. But he realized he didn't need to be.

"If you looked at knowledge as a commodity, we had generated this enormous amount of knowledge and we hadn't even begun to think of the many ways we could apply it," Eisenberger says. He decided he'd settle on a problem he wanted to solve and then dive into the pool of knowledge for existing technologies that could help him.

He started looking for a way to pull carbon dioxide right out of the air. "And it turned out the best device already exists," he says. "It's called a monolith. That is the same type of instrument that's in the catalytic converter in your car. It cleans up your exhaust."

Eisenberg's monoliths grab carbon dioxide from the air and release it again when you heat them up.

He teamed up with a colleague at Columbia, Graciela Chichilnisky, and formed a company to develop the idea. Global Thermostat got seed money from Edgar Bronfman, Jr. ? CEO of Warner Music Group and the former CEO of Seagram's, his family's business.

The company has built two pilot plants at SRI International in Menlo Park, Calif. But of course there are big issues to solve: What do you do with the carbon dioxide once you've captured it, and how do you make money?

"If they don't tell you you're crazy, you're not doing something worthwhile," says Peter Eisenberger, co-founder of Global Thermostat, a firm that's building a device to pull carbon dioxide from the air.

Chris Schmauch/Global Thermostat

"So we then we looked for ways to monetize CO2 and found that lots of people wanted to use CO2 as a feedstock to make a valuable product," Eisenberger says.

Growers pipe carbon dioxide into greenhouses. Oil companies pump it underground to help them squeeze out more oil. Soda companies use it to put bubbles in their drinks. These are mostly small-scale applications.

Maybe someday Eisenberg could get paid to clean up the atmosphere by sucking out the CO2 and burying it underground, though there's no market for that now.

But using carbon dioxide to make fuel could someday be big. So Eisenberger's first project involves using CO2 to feed algae that churn out biofuel.

"Our first demonstration plant is being erected right now down in Daphne, Alabama, with an algae company called Algae Systems, which sits on Mobile Bay," Eisenberger says. "They'll be floating their algae in plastic bags on the top of the water. We'll be piping in CO2 that we pull out of the air, and the sun will do the rest."

Of course, this one project will have zero effect on how much carbon dioxide is in the earth's atmosphere. But Eisenberger has much grander ambitions.

"I believe we have something that's economically viable, so our company will be successful," he says. "But I'm really in this because I want to contribute to a long term solution that the world needs."

Eisenberger says if he can open the door to capturing carbon dioxide from the air ? and make the process cheap enough ? someday we could actually slow down, or possibly even reverse, the buildup of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.

Robert Socolow at Princeton University started hearing a buzz about this technology a few years back.

"It's catchy," Socolow admits. "It's attractive conceptually that one could basically pour carbon dioxide into the atmosphere for the next several decades and pull it out later and everything would be fine." But the appeal of the idea also worried him ? people might use the mere prospect of this technology as an excuse not to act.

So Socolow spearheaded a critique of the technique, on behalf of the American Physical Society.

Socolow's panel concluded that the technology would be hopelessly expensive, costing $600 for every ton of carbon dioxide it drew out of the air. And the scale would also be huge. In order to capture the emissions would waft into the air from a single coal-fired power plant, you'd need to build a structure 20 miles long and 30 feet high. "It's like the Great Wall of China," Socolow says.

The committee concluded that it would make a lot more sense to cut down on emissions first ? make our cars, homes and factories more efficient. Panel members also said it makes much more sense to capture carbon dioxide directly from smokestacks, where it's concentrated, instead of from the air.

Socolow says, maybe someday we'll have our emissions under control, and then we might need to remove some of the carbon dioxide that's already in the air with a capture technology. But, in his view, that's a long way away. "I locate it in the 22nd century," he says. In other words, this might be a good project for Eisenberger's great-great-great grandchildren.

Researchers currently working on carbon dioxide capture technologies say the American Physical Society critique has made it much harder for them to raise money. Klaus Lackner at Columbia University says he was turned down for a government grant. David Keith at Harvard and the University of Calgary says he struggled to get funding for his small company.

"It's a very powerful report from a very credible group of people, and it may well help to kill us and other efforts," Keith says.

Proponents of air-capture technologies say some of the panel's conclusions are just plain wrong ? especially the estimated cost of $600 per ton.

"We have had third party reports, independent people, evaluating our technology, and it's under $50 a ton," Eisenberger says. He hasn't actually demonstrated that cost yet, and he agrees that nobody should take his word for it. But he's stopped arguing with his critics.

"I'm just going to go do it," he says. "And doing it or not ? that's the answer."

Pursuing a big idea takes some hard-headedness and thick skin.

"If they don't tell you you're crazy, you're not doing something worthwhile," Eisenberger says. "Because what you do when you innovate is you disturb the existing order."

Fortunately, this won't be an academic argument forever. "That's the beauty of science. The people that take the time to come into the lab and see it working and do their own evaluation of the cost and the performance, they know it's not crazy."

If the researchers pursuing this technology can really make it inexpensive to draw carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere, Eisenberger says it could be a game-changer.

We could start producing fuels with the carbon dioxide that's already in the air, instead of unearthing more fossil fuels. This won't happen quickly, though.

"The energy infrastructure of the world is $55 trillion," Eisenberger says. So a technology to replace that is "not like a new Google app."

Still, human societies have made such transitions before. "They just don't happen in a day," Eisenberger says. "But they happen."

There's certainly no guarantee that capturing carbon dioxide from the air would ever become a big enough enterprise to make a difference to Earth's climate. But it won't even be put to the test unless people like Eisenberger give it a try.

Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/06/27/189522647/this-climate-fix-might-be-decades-ahead-of-its-time?ft=1&f=1007

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Lazy Shoppers, Rejoice!

Hot Wheels. How do you know whether the popular toy you want to buy is in stock at a store near you? Used to be, you had to go to the store. No more.

Courtesy of victorsounds/Flickr

I?m one of those great dads who decide, late on a Friday afternoon, to do something special for the kids over the weekend. I?m also one of those dads whose imagination for special activities to make the kids happy rarely extends beyond buying them stuff. So there we were last week, looking at Amazon for something for my 2-year-old son. He likes cars, and he?s lately been interested in creating elaborate scenarios for his toy vehicles. As I browsed I came upon something called BluTrack, a long, flexible race-car track that can be assembled into a variety of shapes. It seemed like a toy we could play with together and good for at least 20 minutes of fun, which for a 2-year-old is pretty much all the time in the world.

The only trouble was how to get it. I?d missed Amazon?s one-day shipping deadline, so I?d have to find the item in a store. But how do you find a specific item in a local store? And how do you find the store nearest you with the lowest price on said item, or the store with the most in stock? There aren?t any good ways. You can try Googling for an item and your city, but unless it?s a product of widespread interest, you won?t find much. You can use a product search engine like Google Shopping, but those focus mainly on online stores, not places near your house. (Google Shopping does include some physical retailers, but mostly the big ones that don?t include hard-to-find toys like BluTrack.)

Sometimes, if you?re lucky, the item you want for will have a Web page listing stores that carry it. This worked for BluTrack?through the toy?s site, I found a toy store about 20 miles away that supposedly carried it. But it won?t work for most products, especially food. (Good luck trying to find Sichuan peppercorns nearby.) Even if you do find a local store that carries what you?re looking for, you?ve got to do some more legwork before leaving the house: calling the store to check that the item is actually in stock, confirming how much it costs, and, if it?s popular, asking if they can set one aside for you.

This is such a hassle. People frequently accuse me of hating locally owned stores?not without some justification, I guess?but how could you blame me? Discovery is the soul of shopping; you can?t buy something if you can?t find it. But the inventory at most local stores?especially the non-chain mom-and-pops, from toy shops to stationery shops to bookstores to cafes?is completely hidden. Their stuff is not online, not searchable, not Tweetable, not reviewable, not orderable, and not price-checkable. Today, that?s a fatal commercial sin; when most shopping decisions begin online, an item on a store shelf with no corresponding online presence might as well not even exist.?

Someone is trying to fix this problem. This week the mobile-payment startup Square launched a brilliant new service, Square Market, that allows merchants to put their inventory online at the flip of a switch. Stores that use Square as their point-of-sale registers have already entered their inventory information into the software; they use the system to keep track of what?s selling well, what?s not, and when they?ve got to restock. Now, Square is letting the stores turn that information into online item pages.

Say I run a local coffee shop where, in addition to drinks, I sell a variety of fresh-roasted beans. In my Square Register, I can now turn on the e-commerce switch for each bag of beans. This creates a Square Market page for each bag?a well-designed, easy-to-navigate page where shoppers can buy the beans (for shipping or pickup). The page can be passed around on social networks, pops up in Google searches, and shows customers how awesome my store is so that they can come by to take a look.

In an interview, Square founder Jack Dorsey told me that many Square merchants had been requesting this feature. ?I flip a switch and suddenly everything I sell is online,? Dorsey says. ?I have this online presence that elevates and amplifies everything that I do." For small businesses, it?s a drop-dead easy way to get on the Web: They don?t have to sign up for a Web hosting service and don?t have to pay a Web designer. The only fee is Square?s 2.75 percent cut of online purchases, the same fee it charges for in-store purchases. The service greatly increases a local store?s reach, for no extra money and no extra work.

But the best thing about Square Market is its potential for lazy shoppers like me. When a Square merchant turns on the e-commerce switch for an item, that item goes into Square?s directory of products, making it searchable by location. If I go to Square Market and search for coffee beans or BluTracks or Sichuan peppercorns, I?ll be shown all the nearby stores that have them in stock. I can make my purchase online and pick it up later. ?There?s this great Amazon-like experience we can bring to local merchants,? says Ajit Varma, Square?s director of discovery.

One small problem: At the moment, the results page for a search like ?coffee beans? will bring up the shops that carry beans. That?s helpful, but not as handy as showing you a list of various kinds of beans from many different local stores. Square says that kind of item-by-item results page will come soon, after it gets more items in its e-commerce inventory.

And that gets to the bigger issue with Square Market?it?s very spare. There are a lot of Square merchants in big cities, but once you head out to less dense areas, you won?t find many Square-enabled stores. I live in the heart of Silicon Valley and I?m Square-deprived?if I search for local coffee shops on Square, I get two or three within a few miles, and the rest are in San Francisco, about 30 miles away. This is a chicken-and-egg problem: Stores would get more out of services like Square Market if there were more shoppers using it, but more shoppers won?t come until there are more stores.

So it?s going to take time for Square?s service to become truly useful for most people. It might never happen. But I hope that Square Market at least lights a fire under Google?whose mission, after all, is to make the world?s information searchable. The stuff on store shelves is valuable information. It should be online. And Google, more than anyone else, could do it really well. Get to it, Larry Page!

Source: http://www.slate.com/articles/technology/technology/2013/06/square_market_launches_an_amazon_like_online_presence_for_local_stores.html

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Thursday, June 27, 2013

EE expands LTE coverage to 11 more UK towns

EE

Total markets now 85 as EE claims 55 percent population coverage for 4G?

EE, currently the only 4G LTE operator in the UK, has announced that it's expanded it's 4G network coverage to 11 new towns this morning. From today, EE's LTE goes live in Aldershot, Basildon, Basingstoke, Bracknell, Hitchin, Horsham, Leatherhead, Letchworth, Stevenage, Warrington and Weston-super-Mare, bringing the total number of towns and cities covered to 85.

This, EE claims, gives it 55 percent population coverage for 4G, eight months after the the initial 4G switch-on last November. EE is expected to remain the only option for 4G coverage in the UK until rivals O2, Vodafone and Three launch their LTE networks towards the end of the year. The operator recently launched "double speed" LTE by allocating more of its 1800MHz spectrum to 4G, bringing speeds of 50-80Mbps to some users.

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/38Vsoza7myg/story01.htm

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Engagement Off! Kat Von D Claims DJ Deadmau5 Cheated!

Engagement Off! Kat Von D Claims DJ Deadmau5 Cheated!

Kat Von D and Deadmau5 dunzoHere we go again… Tattoo artist Kat Von D had her heart broken by her former fiance, Jesse James, who cheated on her. Now she claims Deadmau5 cheated too! Maybe Kat Von D needs to find herself a “normal” guy or she is just terribly unlucky in love. Kat Von D, whose real name is ...

Engagement Off! Kat Von D Claims DJ Deadmau5 Cheated! Stupid Celebrities Gossip Stupid Celebrities Gossip News

Source: http://stupidcelebrities.net/2013/06/engagement-off-kat-von-d-claims-dj-deadmau5-cheated/

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Health of detained Syrian activist deteriorating

BEIRUT (AP) ? Syrian activists said Thursday a prominent rights lawyer believed to be in government custody for more than eight months is suffering from deteriorating health and called for his immediate release.

The lawyer, Khalil Maatouk, was abducted while driving to his Damascus office in October and hasn't been heard from since. The 54-year-old is one of thousands of Syrians who have disappeared since the uprising against President Bashar Assad began more than two years ago, and many of them are believed to be held in government detention centers.

Amnesty International estimates that tens of thousands of Syrians are being held incommunicado by the Assad regime but does not have exact figures. The Syrian government denies such cases exist, and says all arrests are carried out legally.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said Maatouk, who is known to have lung disease, is being held in an underground Syrian intelligence detention facility. The Observatory, which relies on a network of activists on the ground in Syria to gather information, said Maatouk's health is deteriorating and called on the United Nations high commissioner for Human rights to help secure his release.

Maatouk tracked and reported on the detention of activists before the anti-Assad uprising began, and continued his work after the revolt broke out in March 2011.

Soon after Maatouk disappeared, a friend of the attorney and lawyer Anwar al-Bunni told the New-York based Human Rights Watch that Maatouk had been traveling down a road loaded with government checkpoints, making it unlikely that non-state actors kidnapped him. Al-Bunni also said that Maatouk had been summoned for interrogation a number of times before his abduction because of his work representing detained activists and his frequent travels.

Maatouk was one of the lawyers following the detention case of another prominent activist, Mazen Darwish, and his colleagues.

Darwish was detained in February 2012 and has since been put on trial in a terrorism court, accused along with four colleagues, of "publicizing terrorist acts."

The Syria-based human rights Violations Documentation Center said their trial of the five on Wednesday was once again postponed to Aug. 21 after the prosecution demanded that the documents and computers confiscated from the defendants' offices be shared with the court.

Syria's conflict started out as peaceful protests against the Assad regime. After a bloody government crackdown on demonstrators, many Syrians took up arms against the regime.

Faced with a relentless rebellion, Assad said his country is at war with terrorists and ratified a new terrorism a law in July 2012 that includes a clause specifically aimed at the opposition. Under the law, the penalty for terrorism that aims to change the regime would exceed 20 years of hard labor.

Human Rights Watch said Darwish and his colleagues were on trial for acts such as distributing humanitarian aid, participating in protests, and documenting human rights abuses. In a statement Tuesday, the group said the trial in a counter-terrorism court violates due process, aims to stifle dissent and called for their release.

"The new Counterterrorism Court is providing judicial cover for the persecution of peaceful activists by Syria's security agencies," said Nadim Houry, deputy Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. "As the discussion about future negotiations between the opposition and government continue, all parties should remember the peaceful activists languishing in detention, subject to torture, mistreatment, and judicial processes that deny them their basic rights."

The group said lawyers in Syria working on cases of political detainees estimate that between 35,000 and 50,000 activists are tried before these courts.

The United Nations recently estimated that 93,000 people were killed between March 2011, when the crisis started, and the end of April 2013. The Observatory put its estimate at more than 100,000 up until this month.

As the bloodshed has intensified, hopes for an international conference to try to reach a political settlement between the regime and opposition have faded. Meanwhile, Washington and its allies say they will help arm the rebels.

In Berlin, German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Thursday warned against shipping weapons to Syrian rebels, telling parliament that in her view, "the risks would be incalculable."

She did not explain why, but critics fear Western arms would only prolong the conflict without tipping the scales decisively. There are also concerns that Western weapons, including anti-aircraft missiles, could fall into the hands of Islamic extremists who might use them against Western targets down the road.

"Whether it would be successful or not is a different question but in my view the risks would be incalculable," Merkel said. "But I think everyone who has a heart understands the wish to stop the killing in Syria and to remove the Assad regime."

___

Associated Press writer Robert H. Reid contributed to this report from Berlin

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/health-detained-syrian-activist-deteriorating-092421571.html

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Kotaku Sorry, Sony, Microsoft or Basically Anyone Else: Conan O?Brien Won E3. | Jalopnik The Ten Mos

Kotaku Sorry, Sony, Microsoft or Basically Anyone Else: Conan O?Brien Won E3. | Jalopnik The Ten Most Unsportsmanlike Moments In Auto Racing | Gawker Supreme Court Strikes Down DOMA, Allows Gay Marriage in California | Lifehacker How I Went From Barely Jogging to Running 100 Miles Per Month

Read more...

    

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/D_isEOriSLQ/kotaku-sorry-sony-microsoft-or-basically-anyone-else-586789135

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Daily Chronicle | Coding camps for kids rise in popularity

ATLANTA ? The video game Jacob Asofsky is creating is simple: "Someone who is trying to take over the world and you try to stop them."

The 12-year-old from Florida is spending two weeks at a summer camp in a program that teaches programming skills to young people.

"It's about having fun, but it also gives them the tools to be able to do this at home because they don't have this in school," said Taylor Jones, director of the iD Tech Camp at Atlanta's Emory University.

So-called coding camps for children are becoming more popular amid a growing effort to expand access to computer programming and inspire more youths to seek computer science degrees and careers in technology. Their rise underscores a seeming mismatch in the U.S. economy: people like Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg and Tumblr founder David Karp illustrate the opportunities programming skills can create, yet universities are not graduating enough code-savvy students to meet employers' demands.

The iD Tech Camps, which have grown from 200 students in 1999 to 28,000 enrolled this year in courses at dozens of locations nationwide, use interest in gaming to build bridges to computer programming and hopefully careers in Web developing, film animation and app creation for smart phones. Courses start at $829 for a one-week course during the day with overnight students paying $1,348.

On a recent weekday, Asofsky was attending an iD Tech Camp on the campus with some 95 other youths under the age of 17. He was using the gaming software RPG Maker to create a video game in which the main character travels around the world, buys animals and armor and interacts with others along the way.

"I have to say the interface of actually making a game is just as fun as playing a game," Asofsky said. "It's a lot like playing a game inside a game."

Early courses for children starting at age 7 use the photo and illustration software Adobe Photoshop and the gaming software Multimedia Fusion to create a simple arcade-style game.

"We sit down and talk about what makes games fun," said instructor Melissa Andrews, who was working with the youngest group of campers. "We get it down to the basics so they can make their own game."

Courses for older children include designing apps, creating sophisticated, 3-D, first-person shooter games using the Unreal Developer's Kit ? also known as UDK ? and learning programming languages like Java and C++. The idea is to build self-confidence and spark interest in learning how computers work, all to perhaps plant the seed of a future career in programming.

There will be 1.4 million computing jobs by 2020 but only 400,000 computer science students by that time, according to Code.org, a nonprofit with a list of who's who in the tech world on its advisory board including Twitter creator Jack Dorsey and Dropbox CEO Drew Houston.

And the jobs pay well. The median annual wage for a computer programmer, for instance, was $71,380 in 2010, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Meanwhile, jobs for network and computer systems administrators are growing at double the national average, with a median annual salary of $69,160.

Yet high schools and universities seem to be out of step with the job market. Nine out of 10 high schools don't offer computer programming classes and the number of students graduating from college with a computer science degree is down from a decade ago, according to Code.org.

Earlier this year, President Barack Obama said programming should be a required course in high school, similar to foreign languages.

"Given how pervasive computers and the Internet is now and how integral it is into our economy and how fascinated kids are with it, I want to make sure they know how to actually produce stuff using computers and not just simply consume stuff," Obama said during a Google+ Hangout.

Yale Oseroff's high school back in Virginia doesn't offer programming classes. The 17-year-old is spending his fourth year at an iD Tech Camp working through C++, a popular programming language used for systems and application software, for drivers to communicate between an operating system and devices like printers and to create some video games.

"I'm learning (computer) networking, which is what I want to do in college," he said, as he worked on developing a program to capture usernames and passwords and store them in a database.

On the Georgia Tech campus, the Institute for Computing Education offers a variety of camps clustered into elementary, middle and high school groups. Courses include making apps with App Inventor, creating moving sculptures with the WeDo Robotics systems that uses rotational motion and creating animations using Alice software.

Barbara Ericson, director of computer outreach at the Institute for Computing Education at Georgia Tech, said people sometimes ask: why not wait until children are older to start teaching them how to program?

"Anything over the age of 7 is capable, they are capable of learning reasoning," she said.

During a presentation earlier this month at a technology conference in Washington, D.C., Code.org founder Hadi Partovi said less than 5 percent of U.S. high school students spend class time learning computer science while it's a graduation requirement in China. He noted that many "software" jobs are outside the tech industry such as banking, retail, government and entertainment, which makes programming skills particularly versatile.

"It could mean starting your own company," he said. "But it could mean you're a doctor and you're tired of entering the same data into a chart using paper and you want to write an app that does it for you."

There are 37 hours, 8 minutes remaining to comment on this story.

Source: http://www.daily-chronicle.com/2013/06/25/coding-camps-for-kids-rise-in-popularity/aid1aq1/

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FileMaker Go 12 (for iPad)


FileMaker Go, which originally began life as a very solid $30 iPad app, should now be considered must-have mobile database software among desktop FileMaker Pro?users. The database program's excellent design, multiple file layouts, integrated search, digital signature capture, and charting capabilities made it a compelling offer when it debuted, but FileMaker Go 12 ups the ante with enhanced multimedia capabilities, multitasking support, and best of all a new price: Free! A few niggles still linger?you still can't create new files and there's no true two-way synchronization?but FileMaker Go 12 is an iPad?database app that can keep you productive while on the go.

What's It All About?
FileMaker Go 12 is designed to do one thing: run FileMaker Pro 12 software (both the regular and advanced versions) on Apple's slate. You cannot, however, create new files using FileMaker Go; that's reserved for the Windows and Mac desktop software. That sting is a bit easier to deal with now that that FileMaker Go costs absolutely nothing to download.

FileMaker Go 12 looks and functions very much like its FileMaker 1.2 predecessor. By default, FileMaker Go displays a very basic two-column interface that contains the heading "Files on Device" in the left column, and "Remote Files and Hosts" in the right column. This setup remains the same regardless of whether you hold the iPad in vertical or horizontal alignment. The "Remote Files and Hosts" column lets you connect to a remote host, and lists recently used FileMaker Pro 12 files. When you open a single file or multiple files, an icon appears in the upper-left corner that displays the number of open windows. Tapping that icon lets you effortlessly navigate through the open windows using a finger swipe.

The FileMaker Go Experience
After transferring a FileMaker Pro 12 database table to the iPad using iTunes' File Sharing feature, I tapped the file, causing it to open in full screen mode. I was pleased to see that the layout hadn't been altered in the transfer, and that I could edit any of the fields. You can have multiple records (think of them as pages) within a single database table, which you can smoothly navigate between by moving the slider at the bottom of the screen, or by tapping the forward or backward arrows. An options icon resides in the upper-right portion of the screen which you can use to change the view ("Form," "List," and "Table"), activate/deactivate the toolbar, print to an Airplay-enabled printer (or use AirPrint), and tweak other settings. Tapping "Save/Send" and then "Database" lets you email, save, or save and open a file, while tapping "PDF" lets your e-mail, view, or save a print-ready file. You can also export data in one of several new file formats including Excel, CSV, TAB, and HTML?very useful.

At the bottom of the interface are three icons that give additional functionality. The first, located to the far left of the navigation slider, lets you select one of 40 themes, including several iPad-friendly designs. The second, located to the right of the navigation slider, lets you add a new set of records to a pre-existing database table, duplicate a database table, delete a database table, or delete found records. The icon to the far right lets you search by file name, omit records from a file, and sort by various criteria (age, amount in stock, item, and much more). In addition, you can now add audio or video that you recorded with your iPad to a container field with just a few button taps. In my time with FileMaker Go 12, I found that all of the options worked smoothly, but FileMaker cautions that there may be some calculation and script behavioral differences when porting files into its mobile app.

Chart Support and Synchronization
FileMaker Go 12 supports Charts created with the desktop FileMaker Pro 12. You can view, edit, and update chart bar, line, and pie charts, but you can't create them from scratch? within FileMaker Go.

The previous version of FileMaker Go let you transfer FileMaker Pro files from your desktop to your iPad using iTunes (or, alternately, by opening and saving an e-mailed file), but the changes weren't synchronized; you needed to use FileMaker Pro on the desktop to import data, which was annoying as it resulted in multiple entries. But if you had files stored on a hosted FileMaker server, any changes that you made using FileMaker Go were automatically saved to the original database file. Overall, the experience was less than ideal.

The situation has been (somewhat) addressed. The Charts feature introduced in FileMaker 12 "syncs" FileMaker Pro data within the chart itself; it isn't, however, a true sync between the local file and the remote file as the changes aren't immediately reflected within the server or desktop software (you must export the changes you've made back to the FileMaker Pro 12). It's a decent first step, but true synchronization would be marvelous.

Digital Signatures
FileMaker Go now lets you accept digital signatures, which will prove a vital offering for those that signing contracts, confirming the receipt of goods, conducting field surveys, and more. Accepting a signature is as simple as having someone John Hancock the "Receiving Signature" field (either with a finger or iPad-compatible stylus). You can then export the captured signature to FileMaker Pro 12 or upload it to a FileMaker Server database. FileMaker 12 now supports multi-tasking so that when you leave the app and then return to it, you'll pick up exactly where you left off.

FileMaker A-Go-Go!
FileMaker Go 12, despite some limitations, is a useful tool for businesspeople who want to access databases on the go, as it gives them the option of shedding a laptop or roaming free from a desktop PC. The ability to create new files and charts from scratch would be a huge benefit (as would true synchronization), but even without those features, FileMaker Go 12 is a more than worthy download for FileMaker Pro 12 and FileMaker Pro 12 Advanced users who need to quickly retrieve, or input, important data on the go.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/W6IXUJAho3U/0,2817,2381220,00.asp

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Wednesday, June 26, 2013

U.S. New Home Sales Hit Fastest Pace in 5 years ... - AOL Real Estate

A builder lays carries bricks on a construction site for residential housing   Photographer: Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg
Getty Images
By MARTIN CRUTSINGER

WASHINGTON - Sales of new homes rose in May to the fastest pace in five years, a solid gain that added to signs of a steadily improving housing market.

New home sales rose 2.1 percent last month compared with April to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 476,000, the highest level since July 2008, the Commerce Department reported Tuesday.

The median price of a new home sold in May was $263,900, up 3.3 percent from a year ago.

Sales of new homes remain below the 700,000 annual rate that's considered healthy by most economists. But the pace has increased 29 percent from a year ago.

Analysts say the housing recovery is looking more sustainable and should continue to boost economic growth this year, offsetting some drag from higher taxes and federal spending cuts.

The sales gains in May were led by a 40.7 percent increase in the Midwest followed by a 20.7 percent gain in the Northeast. Sales were also up 3.6 percent in the West but they fell 9 percent in the South.

The inventory of unsold homes rose 2.5 percent to 161,000 in May, the highest level since August 2011 but still just 13 percent higher than the record low for inventories set in July 2012. Prices of new homes have been rising in part because more people are bidding on a limited number of homes.

The National Association of Realtors reported last week that sales of previously occupied homes surpassed 5 million in May. It was the first time that's happened in 3? years.

Sales of previously owned homes rose to an annual rate of 5.18 million in May. The last time sales had exceeded 5 million was in November 2009, a month when the pending expiration of a home-buying tax credit briefly inflated sales

Steady hiring and low mortgage rates have encouraged more people to buy homes. And with demand up, prices rising and few homes on the market, builders have grown more optimistic about their prospects, leading to more construction and jobs.

Last week, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke cited the housing gains as a major reason the Fed's economic outlook has brightened.

Still, mortgage rates have jumped in recent weeks. And they're expected to rise further now that the Fed has signaled it plans to scale back its bond purchases this year if the economy continues to strengthen. A pullback in the bond purchases would likely send long-term borrowing rates up. Higher mortgage rates could slow some of the housing market's momentum.

For now, a brighter outlook for housing has made builders more optimistic. The National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo builder sentiment index rose in June to 52, up from 44 in May.

That was the highest reading in more than seven years and the largest monthly increase in more than a decade. A reading above 50 indicates that more builders view sales conditions as good rather than poor.

  • <p><strong>Cost of living index:</strong> 87.7</p> <p><strong>Percentage of people over age 65: </strong>10.2 percent</p> <p><strong>Cost of a doctor's visit</strong><strong>:</strong> $79</p> <p>Nashville's average temperature is just shy of 60 degrees. Plus, the city made <a href="http://www.cntraveler.com/daily-traveler/2013/01/today-show-top-travel-destinations-2013-010113">Conde Nast's list of the five best places to go in 2013</a> for its trendy food and famous music.<br /> &nbsp;</p> <p>By <a href="http://www.businessinsider.com/" target="_blank">Business Insider</a></p>
  • <p><strong>Cost of living index:</strong> 93.8</p> <p><strong>Percentage of people over age 65: </strong>11.9 percent</p> <p><strong>Cost of a doctor's visit</strong><strong>:</strong> $100</p> <p>Tucson received higher marks for walkability than most cities on the list. It has plenty of nearby <a href="http://www.visittucson.org/things-to-do/hiking/">hiking trails</a> and <a href="http://www.visittucson.org/things-to-do/birding/">birdwatching locations</a>.<br /> &nbsp;</p> <p>By <a href="http://www.businessinsider.com/" target="_blank">Business Insider</a></p>
  • <p><strong>Cost of living index:</strong> 91.6</p> <p><strong>Percentage of people over age 65: </strong>12.6 percent</p> <p><strong>Cost of a doctor's visit</strong><strong>:</strong> $83</p> <p>Behind Miami, Louisville has the second-highest concentration of people over 65 noted on the list. The city has also been named one of the <a href="http://www.louisvilleky.gov/mayor/news/2007/12-04-07-safestcity.htm">country's safest cities</a> and is home to the Kentucky Derby.<br /> &nbsp;</p> <p>By <a href="http://www.businessinsider.com/" target="_blank">Business Insider</a></p> </div>
  • <p><strong>Cost of living index:</strong> 87.7</p> <p><strong>Percentage of people over age 65: </strong>10.4 percent</p> <p><strong>Cost of a doctor's visit</strong><strong>:</strong> $98</p> <p>San Antonio had one of the lower costs of living in the Top Ten. The city is home to <a href="http://money.cnn.com/magazines/moneymag/bpretire/2007/snapshots/PL4865000.html">almost 20,000 acres of parks</a> and 65 golf courses.<br /> &nbsp;</p> <p>By <a href="http://www.businessinsider.com/" target="_blank">Business Insider</a></p> </div>
  • <p><strong>Cost of living index:</strong> 90.5</p> <p><strong>Percentage of people over age 65: </strong>11.8 percent</p> <p><strong>Cost of a doctor's visit</strong><strong>:</strong> $85</p> <p>Oklahoma City might not have crossed your radar when searching for a retiree spot. But nearly 12 percent of residents are over 65 and the city's <a href="http://welcometobricktown.com/">Bricktown Entertainment District</a> is known for its sports, shopping and dining.<br /> &nbsp;</p> <p>By <a href="http://www.businessinsider.com/" target="_blank">Business Insider</a></p> </div>
  • <p><strong>Cost of living index:</strong> 85.6</p> <p><strong>Percentage of people over age 65: </strong>10.3 percent</p> <p><strong>Cost of a doctor's visit</strong><strong>:</strong> $75</p> <p>Memphis has the lowest cost of living recorded on the Nerdwallet list. And it's warmer than you would think, with an average temperature of 62 degrees.<br /> &nbsp;</p> <p>By <a href="http://www.businessinsider.com/" target="_blank">Business Insider</a></p> </div>
  • <p><strong>Cost of living index:</strong> <span>92.2</span></p> <p><strong>Percentage of people over age 65: </strong>11 percent</p> <p><strong>Cost of a doctor's visit</strong><strong>:</strong> $85</p> <p>Tampa also is known for its warm weather, with an average temperature of 73 degrees. And the city's only about an hour and a half's drive to Orlando if visitors want to check out Disney World.<br /> &nbsp;</p> <p>By <a href="http://www.businessinsider.com/" target="_blank">Business Insider</a></p> </div>
  • <p><strong>Cost of living index:</strong> <span>95.7</span></p> <p><strong>Percentage of people over age 65: </strong>10.9 percent</p> <p><strong>Cost of a doctor's visit</strong><strong>:</strong> $67</p> <p>Jacksonville has the lowest cost for a doctor's visit on Nerdwallet's top ten list at $67. The city also has 20 miles of beaches along the coast.<br /> &nbsp;</p> <p>By <a href="http://www.businessinsider.com/" target="_blank">Business Insider</a></p> </div>
  • <p><strong>Cost of living index:</strong> 94.6</p> <p><strong>Percentage of people over age 65: </strong>11.2 percent</p> <p><strong>Cost of a doctor's visit</strong><strong>:</strong> $74</p> <p>El Paso has the lowest annual price for hiring an in-home service to take care of your shopping, cooking or cleaning needs, at slightly more than $30,000. The city is also known for its <a href="http://www.tpwd.state.tx.us/state-parks/hueco-tanks">scenic Hueco Tanks state historic site</a> and authentic just-north-of-the-border food.<br /> &nbsp;</p> <p>By <a href="http://www.businessinsider.com/" target="_blank">Business Insider</a></p>
  • <p><strong>Cost of living index:</strong> 108.1<strong> </strong></p> <p><strong>Percentage of people over age 65: </strong>16 percent</p> <p><strong>Cost of a doctor's visit</strong><strong style="line-height: 1.5em;">:</strong> $107</p> <p>The city has the highest percentage of people 65-plus on the list, so you're bound to be in good company. It also received stellar marks for walkability and has the warmest average temperature on the list at a balmy 76 degrees. </p><br /> <p>By <a href="http://www.businessinsider.com/" target="_blank">Business Insider</a></p> </div>
  • <p></p> <p><a href="http://www.businessinsider.com/americans-are-worried-about-retirement-2013-3?op=1#ixzz2PPsP2m6X">Americans Have Good Reason To Be Worried About Retirement</a></p> <p><a href="http://www.businessinsider.com/americans-wasting-thousands-on-groceries-2013-3#ixzz2PPsVy4UZ">There's No Reason Americans Should Be Wasting So Much Cash At The Grocery Store</a></p> <p><a href="http://www.businessinsider.com/man-buys-nearly-200-foreclosed-homes-2013-4#ixzz2PPsc3rTV">This Man Bought 200 Foreclosed Homes To Save His Hometown From Ruin</a></p>

Source: http://realestate.aol.com/blog/2013/06/25/u-s-new-home-sales-hit-fastest-pace-in-5-years/

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Tuesday, June 25, 2013

A Terabyte of Portable Storage for $60 Is Your Deal of the Day

A Terabyte of Portable Storage for $60 Is Your Deal of the Day

Here's a 1TB, USB 3.0 capable portable hard drive for $60 shipped from Amazon. That's a good price! And it's another reminder to back your data up.

This deal does what it says on the box: it's a big USB hard drive for cheap. The nicest thing it has going for it is that it's a portable hard drive, so you don't have to fuss with a power cord to plug it in. Depending on the model, most 1TB portable hard drives cost between $80-$100 online, and more in-store. But $60! That's 6 cents per GB, and that's damn cheap, especially with speedy USB 3.0 capability. Although nobody really reviews portable hard drives, if this one craps out on you you're covered by a 3-year Toshiba limited warranty. [Amazon via Deals Kinja]

Top Deals

? 1TB Toshiba Canvio Basics Portable Hard Drive ($60) | Amazon | Originally $80+

Here's Your Productivity Stopping Deal of the Day

A Terabyte of Portable Storage for $60 Is Your Deal of the Day

These smartphone-controlled Deskpets offer a great fun-to-cost ratio at $5. Still $20 at Amazon. Total impulse buy. [Best Buy via 9to5Toys]

Accessories

? Logitech Bluetooth Keyboard ($25) | Tech Woot! via 9to5Toys | Originally $50

? 16GB PNY Flash Drive ($10) | BestBuy via Deals Kinja | Lowest price ever, today only

? 1TB Toshiba Canvio 1TB Portable HD ($60) | Amazon via 9to5Toys | Originally $80

? 3TB MyBook USB 3.0 HD ($80) | Newegg via 9to5Toys | Originally $120 | Use coupon code STRWK749

? Logitech Bluetooth Illuminated Keyboard K810 ($60) | Amazon via Deals Kinja | Matches lowest price ever

Miscellaneous

A Terabyte of Portable Storage for $60 Is Your Deal of the Day

Pretty great deal on a Dyson "bladeless" fan over at Amazon. They're refurbs, but sold by Dyson directly, so it's probably going to be pretty close to new. [Ebay h/t 9to5Toys]

? Starbucks Barista Baratza Burr Grinder ($69) | Baratza | Originally $150 | Other refurb grinders HERE

? Sapphire Vapor-X Radeon HD 7970 ($350) | Newegg via Hard Forum | Originally $370 | Four games too

? $1 Domain Name | 1&1 Internet via Dealmac

? Rosewill Computer Case That's Not Hideous ($32) | Amazon via Deals Kinja | Matches lowest price ever

? 50% off any Handmade Dominoes Pizza | Dominoes via Deals Kinja | Order online and use promo code P6A3N

? Skylanders Giants Starter Pack ($40) | Amazon and Toys-R-Us via Deals Kinja | Lowest price ever, potential to get it for $11 at Target

? LEGO Star Wars Luke's Landspeeder ($20) | Walmart | Discontinued and $30 or more elsewhere

? Monster Cable AV 800 PowerCenter with Surge Protection ($14) | Amazon | Lowest price ever

Gaming

? Cooler Master Sonuz Gaming Headset ($20) | TigerDirect via Deals Kinja | After $20 rebate, $40 elsewhere

PC

? Sweet Borderlands sale over at GetGamesGo, sadly does not include a discount on Dragon Keep. [Steam] | via Comments Section

? Today Only Retro City Rampage [Steam and DRM-free] ($3.75) | Direct from Developer | Lowest ever | RCR just got a big update to go along with this sale

? Tomb Raider [Steam] ($16) | GamersGate via Comments Section | Use code elder-geek.com

? Dead Island: Riptide [Steam] ($15) | Amazon via Comments Section

PS3

FREE After Rebate Kane and Lynch 2 | Newegg

? Pre-order Saints Row 4 ($53) | Newegg | Use code EMCXPVR67

? Ni no Kuni ($20+shipping) | Club Namco via Comments Section

? Pre-order Tales of Xillia ($53) | Newegg | Use code EMCXPVR66

? Tomb Raider ($30) | Amazon

? Far Cry 3 ($20) | Amazon

? The Walking Dead ($20) | Amazon

Xbox

? FREE After Rebate Kane and Lynch 2 | Newegg

? Pre-order Saints Row 4 ($53) | Newegg | Use code EMCXPVR67

? Gears of War: Judgment ($40) | Amazon

? Tomb Raider ($30) | Amazon

? Far Cry 3 ($20) | Amazon

? The Walking Dead ($20) | Amazon

? Kinect Sports ($5) | Newegg

Audio

Nope.

Clothing

? What A Nice Filson Oil Slick Coat ($170) | Filson via Reddit | Originally $290

? 20% off Amazon Clothes | Amazon via Fatwallet | Use coupon code 20APPJUN

? 25% off Levi's Sale | Levi's via Buyvia | Use coupon code EXTRA25

? A Suitable Wardrobe Mid-Season Sale | A Suitable Wardrobe via Put This On

Dumb TV ? Smart TV

Physical Media

? Princess Bride 25th Anniversary [Blu-ray] ($8) | Amazon via Daily DVD Deals

? Lawrence of Arabia Restored [Blu-ray] ($10) | Amazon via Daily DVD Deals

? Pushing Daisies Season 1 or 2 [Blu-ray] (~$15) | Amazon via Daily DVD Deals

? Sherlock Season 1 or 2 [DVD] (~$18) | Amazon via Daily DVD Deals

Digital Media

A Terabyte of Portable Storage for $60 Is Your Deal of the Day

I'm an Amazon Prime subscriber, so sometimes it's easy for me to overlook the fact other Amazon shoppers need to hit minimum orders. Personally, I think Amazon Prime is a great deal. It's my opinion if you plan to spend around $500 on Amazon during a year that you should opt for Prime?the fast free shipping changes the way you shop online, but the streaming service really makes it a great value. For instance, I'll be watching The Avengers tonight... for free.

There's usually a free month trial to Prime. You can find that here: [Amazon]

And if you're a student, you can get 6 months for free, which is great for buying textbooks. (That's how they got me hooked, although it used to be a year.) [Amazon]

Laptops

No?

Desktops

computers.

Tablets

The Android-based Nook as we know it is dead. Long live the Nook. $150 for a 9" tablet. [Barnes & Noble]

Screens

? BenQ 24" 1080p Monitor ($120) | Tiger Direct via Hard Forum | Originally $140

? 27" Monoprice Hi-Res Monitor ($350) | Massdrop via Hard Forum | Originally $400

Portables

Camera

? Rebel T3i Refub ($395) | Canon via 9to5Toys | Originally $500

Bare Drives

? 250GB Samsung 840 Pro ($420) | Ebay | Originally $500

Apps

iOS

? Time Trap ($0) | iTunes | Originally $1

? League of Evil 2 ($0) | iTunes via Appshopper | Originally $2

Android

? Doodle God ($1) | Google Play via App-sales | Originally $3

? Elemental Knights Online RED ($1) | Google Play via App-sales | Originally $7

? R-Type ($2) | Amazon Appstore via Apps-aholic | Originally $3

Windows

? Topaz Lab ($200) | Topaz Labs | Originally $300 | Use coupon code JULY4 | Plugins for Adobe photo programs

Hobomodo

? Free Gevalia Coffee Sample ($0) | Walmart via Reddit

? A Slew of Stuff that's FREE or Crazy Cheap After Rebate | NewEgg via Deals Kinja


Keep up with Kif Leswing on Kinja and Twitter. Check out The Moneysaver for more great tech deals, and deals.kinja.com for even more discounts.


A note on Dealzmodo: We're professional shoppers. Yes, we make money if you end up buying. That's capitalism, but we're absolutely looking out for your best interest. Read this if you want to know more.

Source: http://gizmodo.com/a-terabyte-of-portable-storage-for-60-is-your-deal-of-573833961

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Don Draper hits rock bottom in 'Mad Men' finale

TV

2 hours ago

Image: Jon Hamm as Don Draper in "Mad Men".

Frank Ockenfels / AMC

Don Draper might not have jumped out the window, but his life at Sterling Cooper & Partners came to an abrupt end in the season finale.

For the first time, the great pretender lifted the curtain hiding his sordid, tragic past, but no one in his new world wanted to see it. Don Draper was hired and championed for the fa?ade he created -- Dick Whitman is not welcome on Madison Ave.

After skipping another meeting to get soused in a bar, Don found himself in the drunk tank -- which seemed to be a wake-up call. Megan found him the next morning draining all their liquor -- in the sink instead of down his throat for a change.

And so for one of the firm's most important pitches -- to Hershey's -- Don was on time and sober. (Except for the drink a knowing Ted urged on him so that he wouldn't get the shakes, or worse.)

For a moment, the clients were enchanted by Don's portrayal of Hershey's as "the currency of affection, the childhood symbol of love."

Unfortunately for SC&P, Don chose that moment to bare his soul -- revealing that he grew up as an unwanted orphan in a whorehouse. As a kid, Don said, a Hershey bar "was the only sweet thing in my life."

Now, Don is surrounded by sweet things -- adoring women, children of his own, and all the trappings of success -- but his soul is too bitter to taste them. On Thanksgiving Day, SC&P called him into the office and give them the boot.

"In Care Of" was a lovely bookend to "Mad Men's" fourth-season finale, "Tomorrowland," in which Don proposed to his secretary -- using the engagement ring the real Don Draper gave to his wife Anna -- during a trip to California with his kids.

When Sunkist requested a SC&P rep work with them in Los Angeles, half the staff at SC&P were seduced by the sunshine and palm trees' siren call -- and promise of a new start. Of course, Don claimed Stan's idea of a satellite for himself and announced his plans to the firm. Megan, thrilled to finally take advantage of all the Hollywood offers she'd received, quit her job.

Then Ted convinced Don to let him go instead, because the only way he could save his marriage was to put 3,000 miles between him and Peggy, with whom he'd finally shared a night of passion. Don agreed, infuriating Megan, who walked out after his "bi-coastal" platitudes.

But even Pete is going west. After learning his mother was "lost at sea" (someday this show will run out of metaphors), likely murdered by her nurse-turned-husband, Pete's face was shot off (metaphorically) in Detroit -- by Bob Benson!

Don's double-identity heir apparent will be running SC&P next year, right? Bob Benson has definitely played the best cards, even sharing Thanksgiving with his BFF Joan and Roger, whom she'd invited to spend time with their son.

In another neighborhood, Don is spending Thanksgiving with his kids, but there's no turkey in sight. Instead, even Sally is at a loss for words as he shows them the decrepit whorehouse where he grew up, where a little boy is playing on the front steps.

Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/don-draper-hits-rock-bottom-mad-men-finale-6C10423973

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