শুক্রবার, ৪ জানুয়ারী, ২০১৩

Lindsay Lohan Talks Ethics - Business Insider

It seems her past goals don't really jive with her current situation.

Reddit user djTrip9 posted a picture of an old Nickelodeon magazine article that shows a younger Lindsay Lohan revealing she'd teach ethics if she had the choice:

lindsay lohan ethics

djTrip9/Reddit

That does seem to be a bit of contrast to the troubled actress' current predicament.

Lohan had her probation revoked last month on charges she lied to police about who was driving her Porsche when it crashed last June, TMZ reported at the time.

The picture was first brought our attention by Buzzfeed's Copyranter.

DON'T MISS: All Of The Times Lindsay Lohan Has Gotten In Trouble >

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/lindsay-lohan-talks-ethics-2013-1

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Joseph Farrell, Professor of Economics at University of California ...

By PR Newswire

Article Rating:

January 3, 2013 11:19 AM EST

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103

WASHINGTON, Jan. 3, 2013 /PRNewswire/ --?Bates White is pleased to announce that Dr. Joseph Farrell, Professor of Economics and an Affiliated Professor at the Haas School of Business, University of California, Berkeley, has joined the firm as a Partner in the Antitrust and Competition Practice.

Dr. Farrell recently completed a three-year tenure as Director of the Bureau of Economics at the Federal Trade Commission, where he led approximately 80 economists in analyzing the Commission's antitrust and consumer protection portfolios. In that capacity Dr. Farrell oversaw analyses of a wide range of antitrust matters such as reverse payment settlements, exclusive dealing, and mergers, in such cases as FTC v. Intel, In re Omnicare, In re OSF Healthcare System, FTC v. Promedica Health System, and FTC v. Watson Pharmaceuticals. In 2009?2010 he was a key member of the team that revised the FTC/Department of Justice Horizontal Merger Guidelines.

Dr. Farrell is an experienced expert who has been retained by US and international government and private clients for internal advice and expert testimony. His consulting has dealt with a broad range of competition questions, including pricing practices and mergers in telecommunications, payment systems, and financial exchanges, as well as issues related to aftermarkets and standard-essential patents.

Dr. Farrell's widely cited academic research has focused on the economics of competition, mergers, innovation, and network effects, including standardization and the role of patents. He is an internationally recognized leader for his contributions in industrial organization, regulation and antitrust enforcement, intellectual property, and game theory.

"We are very pleased to welcome Dr. Farrell to our expanding Antitrust and Competition Practice," commented George Rozanski, co-chair of Bates White's Antitrust and Competition Practice. "Joe brings together rigorous theoretical analysis, well grounded in the facts of a matter, with seasoned judgment about the appropriate application of antitrust policy. In addition, he has a remarkable ability to communicate analyses in a clear and compelling way, both to agencies and to the courts."

Doug Bernheim, the Edward Ames Edmunds Professor of Economics at Stanford University and a Bates White Partner, noted that, "Dr. Farrell's impressive academic research is at the crossroads of antitrust and intellectual property. Combined with his extensive government enforcement experience, he is extremely well positioned to tackle the most challenging and high-profile competition matters."

Prior to the FTC, Dr. Farrell served as Deputy Assistant Attorney General for Economic Analysis for the Antitrust Division of the US Department of Justice and as Chief Economist for the Federal Communications Commission. Dr. Farrell joins four other former FCC Chief Economists, Drs. Martin Perry, Leslie Marx, Gregory Crawford, and Marius Schwartz, who are also affiliated with Bates White.

Earlier in his academic career, Dr. Farrell was Chair of the Competition Policy Center at UC Berkeley. Dr. Farrell is a Fellow of the Econometric Society, past President of the Industrial Organization Society, former Editor of the Journal of Industrial Economics, and former Board Member for the National Academies' Computer Science and Telecommunications Board. He received a doctorate in economics and an MSc and a BA in mathematics from Oxford University.

SOURCE Bates White Economic Consulting

Source: http://gov.ulitzer.com/node/2499707

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বৃহস্পতিবার, ৩ জানুয়ারী, ২০১৩

The Number of People Who Have Reportedly Died in Syrian Civil ...

UN Estimates More Than 60,000 Killed in Syrian Civil War in Just 21 Months

In this image taken from video obtained from the Shaam News Network, which has been authenticated based on its contents and other AP reporting, smoke rises from buildings from heavy shelling in Damascus, Syria, on Thursday, Dec. 27, 2012. Credit: AP

BEIRUT (AP) ? The United Nations gave a grim new count Wednesday of the human cost of Syria?s civil war, saying the death toll has exceeded 60,000 in 21 months ? far higher than recent estimates by anti-regime activists.

The day?s events illustrated the escalating violence that has made recent months the deadliest of the conflict: As rebels pressed a strategy of attacking airports and pushing the fight closer to President Bashar Assad?s stronghold in Damascus, the government responded with deadly airstrikes on restive areas around the capital.

A missile from a fighter jet hit a gas station in the suburb of Mleiha, killing or wounding dozens of people who were trapped in burning piles of debris, activists said.

Gruesome online video showed incinerated victims ? one still sitting astride a motorcycle ? or bodies torn apart.

?He?s burning! The guy is burning!? an off-camera voice screamed in one video over a flaming corpse.

It was unclear if the government had a military strategy for attacking the gas station. At least one of the wounded wore a military-style vest often used by rebel fighters. Human rights groups and anti-regime activists say Assad?s forces often make little effort to avoid civilian casualties when bombing rebel areas.

Syria?s conflict began in March 2011 with protests calling for political change but has evolved into a full-scale civil war.

As the rebels have grown more organized and effective, seizing territory in the north and establishing footholds around Damascus, the government has stepped up its use of airpower, launching daily airstrikes. The escalating violence has sent the death toll soaring.

The U.N.?s new count of more than 60,000 deaths since the start of the conflict is a third higher than recent estimates by anti-regime activists. One group, the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, says more than 45,000 people have been killed. Other groups have given similar tolls.

?The number of casualties is much higher than we expected, and is truly shocking,? U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay said in a statement.

She criticized the government for inflaming the conflict by cracking down on peaceful protests and said rebel groups, too, have killed unjustifiably. Acts by both sides could be considered war crimes, she said.

She also faulted world powers for not finding a way to stop the violence.

UN Estimates More Than 60,000 Killed in Syrian Civil War in Just 21 Months

A Syrian boy cleans the debris outside Dar Al-Shifa hospital in Aleppo, northern Syria, on November 22, 2012. The latest toll brought the count of people killed in Syria after 20 months of violence to more than 40,000. Credit: AFP/Getty Images

UN Estimates More Than 60,000 Killed in Syrian Civil War in Just 21 Months

Rescue workers cover a corpse under the debris outside Dar Al-Shifa hospital in Aleppo, northern Syria, on November 22, 2012. Credit: AFP/Getty Images

UN Estimates More Than 60,000 Killed in Syrian Civil War in Just 21 Months

In this photo released by the Syrian official news agency SANA, shows Syrian President Bashar Assad in Damascus, Syria. Growing fear that war in Syria could unleash the world s first use of chemical weapons in nearly three decades is based on two grim scenarios _ neither considered likely but both carrying major risks of a civilian massacre and an escalation of violence. Credit: AP

?The failure of the international community, in particular the Security Council, to take concrete actions to stop the bloodletting shames us all,? Pillay said. ?Collectively, we have fiddled at the edges while Syria burns.?

The U.S. and many European and Arab nations have demanded that Assad step down, while Russia, China and Iran have criticized calls for regime change.

The new death toll was compiled by independent experts commissioned by the U.N. human rights office who compared 147,349 killings reported by seven different sources, including the Syrian government.

After removing duplicates, they had a list of 59,648 individuals killed between the start of the uprising on March 15, 2011, and Nov. 30, 2012. In each case, the victim?s first and last name and the date and location of death were known. Killings in December pushed the number past 60,000, she said.

The total death toll is likely to be even higher because incomplete reports were excluded, and some killing may not have been documented at all.

?There are many names not on the list for people who were quietly shot in the woods,? Pillay?s spokesman Rupert Colville told The Associated Press.

The data did not distinguish among soldiers, rebels or civilians.

It indicated that the pace of killing has accelerated. Monthly death tolls in summer 2011 were around 1,000. A year later, they had reached about 5,000 per month.

Most of the killings were in the province of Homs, followed by the Damascus suburbs, Idlib, Aleppo, Daraa and Hama. At least three-fourths of the victims were male.

Pillay warned that thousands more could die or be injured, and she said the danger could continue even after the war.

?We must not compound the existing disaster by failing to prepare for the inevitable ? and very dangerous ? instability that will occur when the conflict ends,? she said.

The U.N. refugee agency said about 84,000 people fled Syria in December alone, bringing the total number of refugees to about a half-million. Many more are displaced inside Syria.

While no one expects the war to end soon, international sanctions and rebel advances are eroding Assad?s power. Rebels recently have targeted two pillars of his strength: his control of the skies and his grip on Damascus.

Rebels in northern Syria attacked a government helicopter base near the village of Taftanaz in Idlib province, activists said. Videos posted online showed them blasting targets inside the airport with heavy machine guns mounted on trucks.

All videos appeared genuine and corresponded with other AP reporting on the events.

In recent weeks, rebels have attacked three other airports in north Syria. They clashed Wednesday with forces inside the Mannagh military airport near the Turkish border as well as near the Aleppo international airport and adjacent Nerab military airport, halting air traffic there for the second straight day.

The fall of those airports to the rebels would embarrass the regime but not fully stop the airstrikes by government jets, many of which come from bases farther south.

In another blow to the regime and to Syria?s economy, a company based in the Philippines that handled shipping containers at Syria?s largest port said it was canceling its contract, citing an ?untenable, hostile and dangerous business environment.?

The Manila-based International Container Terminal Services Inc. said the amount of port traffic had gone down, hurting business, while conditions in Syria grew more dangerous.

The company?s departure will significantly limit cargo services at the Tartus port.

Also, Wednesday, the family of American journalist James Foley revealed that he has been missing in Syria for more than a month. Foley was providing video for Agence France-Press when he was abducted Nov. 22 by unknown gunmen, his family said in a statement.

?His captors, whoever they may be, must release him immediately,? said AFP chairman Emmanuel Hoog.

Covering Syria has been a challenge for journalists. The government rarely gives visas to journalists, prompting some to sneak in with the rebels, often at great danger.

Source: http://www.theblaze.com/stories/the-number-of-people-who-have-reportedly-died-in-syrian-civil-war-is-heartbreaking/

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বুধবার, ২ জানুয়ারী, ২০১৩

Try Editing Your Vimeo Masterpieces On This Monstrosity of Analog Film

Digital video editing has been so engrained in our collective techno-consciousness, that it seems absurd that film was once—actually—film, and movies had to be assembled by hand on a huge table like this. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/aUBWqLuSyGs/try-editing-your-vimeo-masterpieces-on-this-monstrosity-of-analog-film

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Obama must press Putin on human rights | TribLIVE


By Katrina Lantos Swett

Published: Tuesday, January 1, 2013, 8:43?p.m.
Updated 5 hours ago

The year just passed featured grim news of serious human-rights restrictions imposed by Moscow on Russian society, including religious groups. At their next discussion, President Obama should convey these concerns to Vladimir Putin, reiterating to Russia?s president the need to adhere to universal human-rights and religious-freedom standards if relations are to progress between our two countries.

When I was in Moscow in late September, I heard these worries voiced frequently. In my meetings with 30 individuals representing civil society, journalism, and human rights and religious freedom, all feared that Russia was on the cusp of a new cold war on civil society.

Since Mr. Putin?s return to the presidency, Russia has passed a succession of laws curtailing freedom of expression, association and assembly. Parliament might even pass a proposed blasphemy law that clearly would violate freedom of religion or belief.

The new restrictions began in June 2012 when Putin signed a law that included a 100-fold increase ? more than the average Russian?s annual salary ? in fines for unauthorized protests.

In July, Putin signed legislation requiring foreign-funded nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) involved in ?political activity? to register as ?foreign agents? or face massive fines or two-year jail terms for their leaders. Also in July, Russia?s parliament adopted laws increasing control over the Internet and re-criminalizing certain kinds of libel.

In November, Putin signed a treason law on the day he told the Presidential Human Rights Council that he might revise it.

All of this came on top of acts against pro-democratic U.S. entities, such as closing the U.S. Agency for International Development and denying certain radio frequencies to Radio Liberty.

Recently, Russia?s parliament began considering the criminalizing of blasphemy. A current bill would levy fines and penalties for ?offenses against religion and religious sentiment? and ?offending religious feelings of citizens.?

Were the blasphemy bill to pass, Russians could bring suit against fellow citizens whom they allege have ?insulted their religious sentiments.?

For instance, Russian Orthodox believers who view Apple?s logo as glorifying Adam and Eve?s original sin in the Bible also could prosecute Apple executives.

Clearly, a blasphemy law could push Russia?s religious freedom conditions from the proverbial frying pan into the fire.

Even without this proposal, Russia maintains a blatant double standard on religious freedom. While favoring the Moscow patriarchate of the Russian Orthodox Church, it targets Muslims and other groups.

Russia?s course unmistakably threatens democracy but also stability, potentially pitting the Moscow patriarchate against Russia?s 25 million Muslim citizens.

For the sake of both freedom and stability, it?s time to remind Russia?s president that, for the United States, human rights matter, and it?s time to condemn last year?s eclipse of those rights in Putin?s Russia.

Katrina Lantos Swett is chairwoman of the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom.

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Source: http://triblive.com/opinion/featuredcommentary/3217866-74/russia-religious-freedom

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FileLocker


The trend towards moving all your digital content to the cloud has gotten the most exposure wth consumer services like Apple iCloud, Google Drive, and Microsoft SkyDrive. These services can store things like photos and documents, automatically syncing them among all your devices and computers. But cloud syncing really becomes powerful when used in a business setting. This is where FileLocker, a new product from InfraScale (the company behind SOS Online Backup) hopes to shine. FileLocker claims better security than existing players as its main differentiator, and that's of huge importance for businesses. The service also boasts robust user-administration capabilities and a "private cloud" capability that lets businesses host the service on their own servers.

A particularly powerful capability of syncing services for business users are their collaboration features that let coworkers share and co-edit work documents. FileLocker is the newest entry in this game, but other services target businesses specifically, too, including Box, Egnyte, SafeSync for Business, and Syncplicity Business Edition. Let's explore this new service and see how it stacks up.

Setup and Sign up
FileLocker offers free personal accounts with up to 5GB of storage each for up to five users, for a total of 25GB. For more than five users, it's $5 per user per month support for six to ten users costs $500 a year?significantly less than Box's $1,080 a year for six users ($15 per user per month). Unlike Box, thankfully no credit card info is needed to get your free account. Even though this level is called "personal," the signup form still includes a line for "company." You also need to fill in your name, email, secret questions, and password.

Given the FileLocker's emphasis on security, I was surprised that strong passwords were not required at this point, but it does have to be 6 characters in length and contain an uppercase or non-alpha character. By comparison, Dropbox's signup is very clear about password strength, with even 8-character ones indicating levels like "very weak," "so-so," and "good," and Box offers similar ratings. With its emphasis on security, I'd expect FileLocker to have this kind of password evaluation, but it didn't. After this, you just sign in on FileLocker's website. ?(For some great tips on passwords, read Password Protection: How to Create Strong Passwords.)

To get FileLocker to synchronize files on your desktop PC (a Mac version should be coming this month), you need to install a local agent program. Oddly, this seemingly integral part of the system is found under "Extras" on the dashboard page.

Interface
Most interactions with FileLocker occur in a Web browser, and the service's Web interface is mostly clear and nicely designed.? The first time you look at your account page, a popup tells you to "upload a file," and a large Upload button and drag-and-drop target always graces the top of the page. IE told me with every page view, "Only secure content is displayed," with an option to "show all content." Again, I was surprised such a security-minded site would prompt this message. The Web interface does allow drag-and-drop file syncing, but it's not supported in IE9.

FileLocker adds its context menu to all files and folders listed in your Windows Explorer windows, but the options were less than crystal clear: What I wanted was a simple "Sync this file or folder now" choice (like that in the new Cubby product from LogMeIn), but instead I got Sync, Sync and Share, About Sync, Sync Options, and Show Sync Status. The first sounded easy enough, but it required me to choose a remote syncing folder, which could well contain other files that had nothing to do with the present folder's contents. For the average user, I think it's actually preferable to have synced folders and files all in one place, as SkyDrive, and Google Drive do, though some will prefer the flexibility of sync anything anywhere on your system.

When I added the "and Share" option, the same process was followed by another dialog for Share Settings, which had a check box for "Enable Download Receipts." Deploy that option, and FileLocker will send you an email each time someone downloads the shared file or folder. But I wasn't asked with whom I wanted to share; only later, a tooltip say Share Link available, and then disappeared. Ideally, I'd be given a box to type in emails of collaborators. Shared folders helpfully get a new folder icon, with FileLocker's arced arrow logo.

FileLocker's Search Files option, available from the left panel, worked well for finding files, but why not have the search bar always available at the top, as it is in every webmail interface? Once I'd found a file (or this would be the case for any file listing in the Web interface), I could right-click or just click a dropdown arrow to get Preview, Download, Upload New Version choices. I could also view history, send the file, generate a link to the file, unshare it, move it to another folder, delete it.

Version control is a strength of FileLocker, as it is for InfraScale's flagship service, SOS Online Backup. Both services keep all versions of your files forever, unless you explicitly delete them. I also liked how the versions box on the Web interface lets you make any existing version current; this way, if a collaborator made an edit that was overruled, it would be easy enough to roll back the change.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/sXyp2-x_DpU/0,2817,2413761,00.asp

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মঙ্গলবার, ১ জানুয়ারী, ২০১৩

Turn your iPhone into a thermal imaging device with the IR-Blue Kickstarter project

Turn your iPhone into a thermal imaging device with the IR-Blue Kickstarter projectIf you have ever had the need for a thermal imaging device then you know how expensive they can be. Well this latest Kickstarter project looks to change all of that by utilizing your iPhone and a new clip on thermal imaging camera. The project which is currently running on Kickstarter, was developed over a need to find leaks in a home owners property to curtail spiraling energy costs.

I have a 100 year old house that can be drafty and hard to heat in the winter. I have been wanting a thermal imaging camera to help find leaks ever since we bought this house. The cheapest one I could find was $1,500 so I finally just made my own. This is the IR-Blue.

The IR-Blue lets you see the temperature of things around you. It uses a 64 zone non-contact InfraRed sensor array to read the temperature of what you are viewing. The IR-Blue connects using Bluetooth to your iPhone or Android device to show the temperature readings as colors on the screen.

The IR-Blue has already smashed its funding target of $20,000 and currently sits at over $112k. Thankfully it is not too late to grab a piece of the early action. You can make a pledge starting at $145 for a self-assembly kit or $165 for an IR-Blue fully assembled.

This is certainly an accessory that I would be interested in, I have an old stone built house that leaks energy like a sieve. With one of these attached to my iPhone I could pin point all of the problematic areas with ease. What do you think of the IR-Blue?

Source: Kickstarter



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/_dkv1FPgiHo/story01.htm

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