Friday, October 25, 2013

Memory testing can age older adults in minutes


By Kathleen Raven


NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Older adults who feel younger than they really are might want to steer clear of memory tests, or risk feeling older, a new study suggests.


It's been known that doing poorly on memory tests influences what age an older adult may "feel," an effect called subjective aging. But a team of researchers have shown through a series of four experiments that the mere thought of a memory test can make men and women age 60 and older feel, well, older.


"Past research has referred to subjective age as a fixed number and we have shown that subjective age can change in five minutes," Lisa Geraci, associate professor of psychology at Texas A&M University in College Station, said.


Geraci is senior author of the study, which appeared in Psychological Science, and developed its concept.


The first experiment involved 22 men and women with an average biological age of 75 years recruited from the area around the university's campus. Before the test, the participants were shown a piece of paper with an unmarked line and told one millimeter equaled one year, then asked to tick off the age they felt along the line.


Immediately after that, they were given a list of 30 words to remember and took a five-minute memory test.


Before the test, the average subjective age hovered at 59 years old. Afterwards, participants reported feeling about 63.


The researchers then wondered: Do young people experience the same "aging" process? Do aging adults feel older after other types of tests, like vocabulary skills? And, what if a memory test is merely mentioned, but not actually administered?


Geraci and her team also wanted to eliminate any influence that being in a college campus environment - filled with young people - might have.


So the next three experiments were done online.


The researchers recruited 50 participants in the U.S., half were young adults in their 20s and half older adults in their 60s. The memory test experiment was repeated in the online format. Again, older adults felt about four years older after the test. The young people didn't feel any different about their age.


Fifty-seven older adults - average age of 60 - took part in a separate experiment done online. About half were assigned to take a memory test, and the rest could show off their vocabulary skills. Those who took the vocabulary test didn't feel aged at all. Their counterparts doing the memory recall felt about five years older.


These results, the researchers write, fit with a general negative stereotype in society that associates aging with memory loss.


"People don't think ‘Oh gosh, I'm losing my vocabulary,'" Geraci told Reuters Health.


In the final experiment of the series, 30 adults in their late 50s and 60s were asked to give the age they felt at the start, and again after simply reading instructions for a memory test. Again, all participants reported feeling older.


The experiments support previous research showing that context can have powerful effects on how old a person feels.


For example, a trip to the local gym can be an "aging experience" for older adults, said Henry Roediger of Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri.


Geraci studied aging concepts in Roediger's lab in the early 2000s, but he was not involved in the current research.


"The self-image is changeable and malleable," Roediger, who offered his age of 66, said.


He pointed out that in all four studies, older adults always reported a younger subjective age than their numerical one - even after the memory tests.


"It's an interesting study," said Igor Grossmann, assistant professor of psychology at the University of Waterloo in Canada.


Grossmann regularly studies aging-related subjects, but has no connection with the current research.


He noted that the number of participants in the experiments was small, but seeing that different versions of the experiments produced the same subjective aging effect "is powerful."


"We are all living in a society in which we often put older adults in a perspective that they are not doing well," he said.


"In terms of care, it would depend on the goal of a doctor's office visit," Grossmann said, but "it would probably be good to ask first about general well-being, then maybe what they ate for breakfast, before finally asking about memory."


Using these techniques means the older person does not have to be reminded of his or her age right away.


"The bottom-line message would be to try and be cautious and mindful of stereotypes and how we talk about the performance of older adults," Grossmann said.


SOURCE: http://bit.ly/17gs2OF Psychological Science, online October 7, 2013.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/memory-testing-age-older-adults-minutes-153418632.html
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After hiatus, Obama returns to campaign mode in NY

(AP) — President Barack Obama is opening a six-week burst of fundraising for Democrats, offering an early look at how he'll frame the messy health overhaul rollout and recent government shutdown for donors and voters ahead of next year's pivotal midterm elections.

After putting political events on hold for about a month, Obama will return to campaign mode Friday in New York, where he'll speak at a top-dollar fundraiser for House Democrats, flanked by film producer Harvey Weinstein and prominent CEOs. He'll then head to another, closed-door fundraiser benefiting the national Democratic Party before returning to Washington.

Earlier Friday, Obama will visit a Brooklyn high school to showcase a rare partnership between public schools, a public university system and IBM that lets students finish high school with an associate's degree in computers or engineering.

His fundraising schedule condensed, Obama will headline at least nine fundraisers before the end of November for Democratic campaign committees. Michelle Obama and Vice President Joe Biden are holding their own events. Obama's spree will take him away from Washington more than a half-dozen times, from Florida to Texas to California.

Traditionally, the president is a party's most potent fundraising tool, and the effort isn't without potential reward for Obama. A return of Congress to full Democratic control next year would open the door to sweeping policies Obama would love to enact, but Republicans refuse to consider.

In sporadic fundraisers earlier in the year, when Obama was actively seeking better relations with Republicans, he avoided overt partisanship in his pitch to donors. His message was: I'll work with fair-minded lawmakers from either party, but the more power Democrats have in Congress, the better my chances for success.

But any semblance of comity between Obama and Republicans evaporated during the standoff over government funding and the debt ceiling, when the White House was accusing the GOP of holding hostages and threatening to burn down the house. Republicans' insistence that the government shut down unless Obama agreed to debilitating changes to his health care law made the lack of common ground all too clear.

So the immediate crisis averted, Democrats and Republicans alike are looking to the president's words on Friday for signs of how Obama and his party will cast the bitter fights in Washington as they gear up for 2014 races across the country.

"I recognize that the Republican Party has made blocking the Affordable Care Act its signature policy idea," Obama said this week at the White House. "Sometimes it seems to be the one thing that unifies the party these days."

More Americans blame Republicans than Obama for the 16-day shutdown, giving Obama and Democrats a new bludgeon to hammer Republicans and argue they must be voted out. Just 32 percent of Americans view the Republican Party favorably, according to a Washington Post-ABC News poll conducted Oct. 17-20, compared to 46 percent who view Democrats favorably.

The political blow to the GOP from the crisis has made some Democrats more bullish about retaking the House next year — an incredibly tall order that, if successful, would bolster Obama's prospects for achieving his second-term goals.

But at the same time, Obama is weighed down by the calamitous debut of the website for new insurance exchanges, raising the prospect that Obama's health care law will be more of a liability than an asset in 2014 even for Democrats who supported the law.

"I would take our position over theirs any day of the week," said Mo Elleithee, the Democratic National Committee's communications director. "We have been working to give people more benefits and increase their access to affordable health care, while Republicans shut down the government."

After winning re-election last year, Obama vowed to go all-in for Democrats by holding at least 20 fundraisers ahead of the midterm elections. Although Obama had planned to spread events out over many months this fall, Democratic officials say he was forced to put politicking on hold — first by the crisis over Syria's chemical weapons, then by the shutdown-and-debt debacle.

By and large, Democrats have been more successful than Republicans in leveraging the fiscal showdown to raise money, according to fundraising reports released by campaign committees for House and Senate. But Republicans say that's where Obama's usefulness to his party ends. After all, the nation's new health insurance program remains a tough sell even with independent voters, and Obama is personally unpopular in many of the southern, conservative-leaning states holding critical Senate elections next year.

"There's still not one Democrat candidate in a toss-up race who wants him visiting their district, because they know he's not wanted anywhere other than New York, San Francisco or Chicago," said Daniel Scarpinato, a National Republican Congressional Committee official.

___

AP Director of Polling Jennifer Agiesta contributed to this report.

___

Follow Josh Lederman on Twitter: http://twitter.com/joshledermanAP

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-10-25-Obama/id-dfb9a2c285ec4abeb02a22038da52bb5
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Apple rolls out iOS 7.0.3 with plenty of improvements and bug fixes

While there was no mention of an iOS update being released today during the keynote, Apple has now sent out iOS 7.0.3 to the masses and along with it, plenty of improvements and bug fixes.

We've not been able to get the update OTA as of yet but it is now appearing through iTunes and and ready for download. As noted, there is plenty of improvements and bug fixes, some of which is also required for Mavericks to play nicely, so here's what's highlighted in the change log:

  • Adds iCloud Keychain to keep track of your account names, passwords, and credit card numbers across all your approved devices
  • Adds Password Generator so Safari can suggest unique, hard-to-guess passwords for your online accounts
  • Updates lock screen to delay display of "slide to unlock" when Touch ID is in use
  • Adds back the ability to search the web and Wikipedia from Spotlight search
  • Fixes an issue where iMessage failed to send for some users
  • Fixes a bug that could prevent iMessage from activating
  • Improves system stability when using iWork apps
  • Fixes an accelerometer calibration issue
  • Addresses an issue that could cause Siri and VoiceOver to use a lower quality voice
  • Fixes a bug that could allow someone to bypass the Lock screen passcode
  • Enhances the Reduce Motion setting to minimize both motion and animation
  • Fixes an issue that could cause VoiceOver input to be too sensitive
  • Updates the Bold Text setting to also change dial pad text
  • Fixes an issue that could cause supervised devices to become un-supervised when updating software

Needless to say, that's quite the list and if you've been having any issues, you'll certainly want to see if they've been covered by this release. Have you grabbed the download yet? Sound off in the comments or in the iMore forums and let us know how it went for you.


    






Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/xOoV4Hx9iNk/story01.htm
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Kendall & Kylie Jenner: Retail Therapy in West Hollywood with a New Pup

Looking to distract themselves from the recent tabloid attention, Kendall and Kylie Jenner headed over to Fred Segal in West Hollywood for a spot of shopping on Wednesday (October 23).


The “Keeping Up with the Kardashians” cuties were joined by a few friends and Kendall’s new puppy as they chatted and shopped while shutterbugs looked on.


As previously reported by the GossipCenter, the Jenner gals have both fired back at claims that they scored fake IDs, got wasted, and hung out at a sex-themed nightclub last week.


Kendall tweeted, "I am so done with everyone making my little sister and I out to be something that we are not. shut up with these stupid rumors and stories."


"I'm not going to sit around and let grown adults create untrue stories about me underage drinking & partying every night with a fake I.D,” added Kylie.


Source: http://celebrity-gossip.net/keeping-kardashians/kendall-kylie-jenner-retail-therapy-west-hollywood-new-pup-1053946
Tags: dolly parton   American Horror Story   chicago fire   Larry Shippers   Erbie Bowser  

U.K. Official Urges U.S. Government To Adopt A Digital Core

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Does this sound familiar? A national IT project plagued with high-profile problems, integration breakdowns involving contractors, and taxpayers left footing a multimillion-dollar price tag: The scenario's playing out with HealthCare.gov, but a similar one in the U.K. led to major reforms.Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/NprProgramsATC/~3/D-aeZQsq2hE/u-k-official-urges-u-s-government-to-adopt-a-digital-core
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James Lipton Announces the Cast of "Arrest Developement" to on "Inside the Actor's Studio"

Seven years after its cancellation, "Arrested Development" returned on Netflix for a fourth season, and now the cast will appear on "Inside the Actor's Studio" to dish on the little show that could.


Announcing the next guest on the in-depth interview series, host James Lipton reenacted the famous chicken dance in an Adidas jumpsuit in a video posted to Instagram. Series regulars expected to appear include, Jason Bateman, Michael Cera, Portia de Rossi, Will Arnett, Tony Hale, and David Cross.


Catch the cast of "Arrested Development" on "Inside the Actors Studio" on November 7th at 8:00pm ET on Bravo.


Meanwhile, creator Mitch Hurwitz is already thinking about season 5, telling the audience of New York TV Festival, "All I've been able to say is, I really want to continue with this, and the cast really wants to continue with this. What my new thing is, because it might be tough to get the cast together for the four months you would need to make a series, is to try to get them together for four weeks sooner, and do the movie that is the story that we've been building up to in this show. And then, bring the series back after that. If not my decision, but it’s what I want to do. The reason I’m not just saying, let’s go do the series next, is because I’m worried it’ll take two years to make all those deals -- a mess of people, a weird tease to all of us and the audience. So my goal is to do a movie for Netflix type thing, and then go into the series."





Source: http://celebrity-gossip.net/arrested-development/james-lipton-announces-cast-arrest-developement-inside-actors-studio-949163
Tags: carrie   911 Memorial   msft  

How Much of Your Shopping Is Done on Amazon?

How Much of Your Shopping Is Done on Amazon?

If you live in a big city without a car, it's probably easier to just do all your shopping on Amazon. If you drive everywhere and have a Costco membership, it might make sense to do all your shopping there. If you drive sometimes but like getting packages, maybe you combine the best of both worlds? Whatever it is you do for shopping though, how much of it do you do with Amazon?

Read more...


    






Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/LP0G_rqdULU/how-much-of-your-shopping-is-done-on-amazon-1451919785
Category: Malala Yousafzai   tom hanks   Teyana Taylor   labor day   Will Smith Miley Cyrus  

Freida Pinto Supports Isabel Marant at H&M Photocall

Attending one of the largest events H&M has to offer, actress Freida Pinto made a brilliant appearance at the 'Isabel Marant For H&M' Photocall at Tennis Club De Paris today (October 24).


Electrifying in a patterned black, white and red sweater over a white blouse, Freida also wore a matching black and white skirt and gray heel boots.


Isabel posed alongside H&M Creative advisor Margareta Van Den Bosch, wearing a stylish charcoal overcoat, white blouse and black leather shorts. She completed her look with designer heels and a black handbag.


In related news, Freida is awaiting the late 2013 release of her new biography-drama, “Desert Dancer.” According to the synopsis, the movie tells the “Inspirational true story of Iranian dancer Afshin Ghaffarian, who risked his life for his dream to become a dancer despite a nationwide dancing ban.”


Source: http://celebrity-gossip.net/freida-pinto/freida-pinto-supports-isabel-marant-hm-photocall-949347
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Thursday, October 24, 2013

Detective: Defendant admitted shooting NFL player


MIAMI (AP) — A man on trial in the slaying of Washington Redskins star safety Sean Taylor admitted to breaking into the NFL player's home, kicking down the bedroom door and shooting Taylor, and drew a detailed diagram of the house, labeling himself as the shooter, according to a videotaped confession played for the jury Thursday.

Defendant Eric Rivera Jr. wasn't handcuffed but came willingly to talk to authorities in Fort Myers in November 2007, a Miami-Dade police detective testified. At first, the now 23-year-old, told investigators he stayed home all weekend and maybe caught a movie with his girlfriend. As authorities pressed, he said he had a bad memory and that everything was foggy, said lead investigator Juan Segovia.

When authorities walked another defendant by the room where Rivera was being questioned, Rivera grew noticeably anxious, Segovia said. He refused to make eye contact and kept rubbing his hands together. One of the detectives gave a moving speech, saying Taylor was an American hero who was doing nothing wrong but was at home sleeping with his baby and girlfriend when he was killed, Segovia said.

That's when Rivera's eyes grew teary and he nodded that he had been involved. Rivera and four co-defendants heard Taylor liked to keep a lot of cash around the house, maybe as much as $200,000. They thought Taylor would be with the Redskins at a game at Tampa Bay the night they broke into his house — but instead he was home with a knee injury, the detective said Rivera told him.

The plan was to "go in and get the money and leave," Rivera said in a videotaped confession played for the jury.

Rivera admitted driving the black SUV, parking in front of Taylor's home, hopping a concrete wall and using a crowbar to break into a back patio door. As they searched the home for money, they heard a noise, got spooked and ran back to the car. When they re-entered, Rivera said he kicked in Taylor's bedroom door.

"He was like 2 feet away, got something in his hand and that's when I shot," he said.

Rivera told detectives he didn't think anyone would be home and didn't realize Taylor was the one he'd shot. In the video, Rivera, who has long hair and is seated next to an American flag, shows little emotion and often gives one-word answers.

Jackie Garcia, Taylor's girlfriend, who was also inside the bedroom, became noticeably upset as the detective recounted details of the slaying and rested her head on her knees in court. She sat near several members of Taylor's family, including his father, Florida City Police Chief Pedro Taylor, in the packed Miami-Dade County courtroom.

Taylor was shot in the upper thigh, which severed his femoral artery. The former University of Miami star had a machete in his hand, and Garcia and their infant daughter were also in the bedroom, though they were not hurt. Taylor died the next day from massive blood loss. The 24-year-old was a Pro Bowl safety for the Redskins who had previously been a popular, locally grown star at the University of Miami.

"He knew he hit him in the area of the leg. He said the victim fell very rapidly and very hard," Segovia said.

After the shooting, Rivera said he shot through a glass door so he could escape quickly. The group jumped back into the SUV and as they drove across an interstate known as Alligator Alley, they wiped off the gun, stuffed it into a sock and threw it into the Everglades, according to the confession. Rivera said he burned his clothes when he got home.

The validity of a detailed, videotaped confession is the central question for jurors to decide in the first-degree murder trial.

The video shows Rivera waiving his rights to an attorney and remain silent. The detective also said Rivera turned down an offer to call his parents several times.

Rivera drew diagrams of the rooms and where everyone was at the time, labeling himself as a stick figure that shot Taylor, the detective said. He also said he was wearing the Nike Shox when he kicked in the door and seemed amused when investigators showed him a footprint lifted from the door, Segovia testified.

Rivera's attorney, Janese Caruthers, countered that Rivera was coerced into the confession by a team of investigators who had little evidence and was looking for someone to take the fall in a high-pressure case. He noted Rivera was brought in after being pulled over during a traffic stop and that officers did not go to his home and ask him parent's permission.

"In this case it was better not to have Mr. Rivera's father present during the interviews," Caruthers asked and the detective agreed. After the teen confessed, police called his father who came to the station.

But Segovia said Rivera "was very open, very relaxed ... he was eager to talk to us" and was given an hour-long pizza and soda break.

Because Rivera was 17 at the time of the crime, his maximum possible sentence if convicted is life in prison rather than the death penalty.

__

Follow Kelli Kennedy on Twitter: http://twitter.com/kkennedyAP

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/detective-defendant-admitted-shooting-nfl-player-183702041--spt.html
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Shares resume upward trend on China data; dollar remains weak


By Angela Moon


NEW YORK (Reuters) - Global equity markets resumed their recent upward trend on Thursday, boosted by signs of growth in Chinese manufacturing, while the euro rose to a fresh two-year peak against the dollar.


On Wall Street, the S&P 500 index was on track for its tenth gain in the past 12 sessions as expectations for steady accommodative monetary policy for the foreseeable future offset a mixed batch of earnings and economic data. The benchmark index closed at a record on Tuesday.


Boosting investors' appetite for risky assets was data showing growth in China's vast factory sector reached a seven-month high this month, easing concerns about a slowdown in Chinese exports, which would point to weakening global demand.


In the United States, initial claims for state unemployment benefits fell less than expected in the latest week. The preliminary read of Markit's Manufacturing Purchasing Managers Index grew at its slowest pace in a year this month and factory output contracted for the first time since late 2009.


The euro was up 0.2 percent at $1.3802, having hit $1.3824, its strongest since November 2011, while the dollar fell broadly, hitting a near nine-month low against a basket of currencies <.dxy> of 79.081. It was last down 0.1 percent at 79.166.


U.S. Treasuries yields held near three-month lows on Thursday as expectations that the Federal Reserve is still months away from reducing the size of its $85-billion-a-month bond-purchase program kept up strong demand for the debt.


Fed policy is seen as very data-dependent, though economic indicators over the coming months are likely to be skewed by the effects of the government shutdown. That could limit insight on the state of the economy and to what degree the shutdown and the fight over raising the debt ceiling harmed growth.


"What we've been seeing since the government shutdown and debt ceiling was resolved is a desire to jump back into Treasuries," said Jason Rogan, managing director in Treasuries trading at Guggenheim Partners in New York.


"Most market participants are of the mind that the Fed is on hold for the foreseeable future."


Benchmark 10-year Treasuries were last was down 7/32 in price to yield at 2.5106 percent, near the three-month lows of 2.47 percent set on Wednesday.


On Wall Street, the Dow Jones industrial average <.dji> was up 93.07 points, or 0.60 percent, at 15,506.40. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index <.spx> was up 6.02 points, or 0.34 percent, at 1,752.40. The Nasdaq Composite Index <.ixic> was up 24.80 points, or 0.63 percent, at 3,931.88.


European shares recovered their poise, climbing back toward five-year highs on strong corporate results and the encouraging manufacturing data from top metals consumer China.


The pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 index <.fteu3> rose 0.5 percent to 1,285.89, recovering from the previous session's fall and climbing back toward Tuesday's five-year highs of 1,291.93.


MSCI's world equity index <.miwd00000pus> added 0.3 percent, slightly retracing losses of 0.6 percent on Wednesday, when markets were rocked by fears that a spike in Chinese short-term rates could hurt growth.


MIXED EARNINGS


U.S. corporate earnings continue to pour in, with 47 S&P 500 <.spx> components expected to report on Thursday, including Microsoft Corp and Amazon.com Inc after the close of trading.


So far, the prospect of continuing easy money was enough to offset an earnings season marked by some weak outlooks and tepid revenue growth. Shares of Dow Chemical Co , Xerox Corp and AT&T Inc all fell following results on Wednesday, though Ford Motor Co was a bright spot.


"Earnings haven't been a best-case or worst-case scenario, but it doesn't look like the economy is firing on all cylinders," said John Norris, managing director of wealth management with Oakworth Capital Bank in Birmingham, Alabama.


"Still, while the gains we've seen might be illusory, given the Fed, there's no reason to think we're on the cusp of a pullback so long as the Fed stays put."


In commodities trading, spot gold rose as much as 1.2 percent to its highest since September 20 at $1,348.24 an ounce, as the outlook for an unchanged Fed policy heightened concerns about inflation risk.


Brent crude futures slipped as rising supplies of crude oil in the United States drove prices toward a two-month low, while U.S. crude fell for a fourth straight session, to its lowest since June. But the selling was not as heavy as in the previous session.


Brent crude oil was down 71 cents to $107.09 a barrel while the U.S. crude oil benchmark, West Texas Intermediate or WTI, edged up 13 cents to $96.99.


Copper fell to its lowest in more than a week as concerns about tight credit in China and its impact on demand offset the brighter growth outlook.


(Editing by Dan Grebler and James Dalgleish)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/asian-shares-slip-china-looks-set-tighten-liquidity-031612596--business.html
Tags: james franco   torrie wilson   iOS 7   green bay packers   Hasnat Khan  

After nightmare road to last fight, Michael Kuiper not sweating the pressure against Brad Scott


Michael Kuiper entered the UFC in early-2012 with lofty expectations. A black belt judoka out of the Netherlands, the ink on Kuiper's contract had barely dried before the then-undefeated 22-year-old made his Octagon debut against Rafael Natal.


Since that time Kuiper has lost two of three, while suffering through a revolving door of opponent withdrawals and fight delays. His roller coaster tenure inside the UFC has now led to UFC Fight Night 30, where Kuiper and Brad Scott will open up the Facebook prelims, often the last bastion for fighters on the edge to make a case for themselves. Kuiper, however, isn't worried.


"I am not a person that focuses on things I can not control," he told MMAFighting.com. "Stress has always been something I managed throughout my fighting career both in Judo and MMA.


"I see this this fight like any fight. It is another opportunity to test myself as an athlete and fighter. I focus on what I can control, and don't place any unnecessary stress on myself. I am there to train and win."


If Kuiper is in a better frame of mind for this camp, even despite the potential ramifications of a loss, it's not hard to blame him. The road to Kuiper's last fight, a submission loss to Tom Lawlor, is in the running for being the unluckiest in recent MMA history.


Kuiper was initially scheduled to meet Thiago Perpetuo in January, but then Perpetuo withdrew due to an injury less than two months out from the bout. Caio Magalhaes replaced him, yet three weeks later Magalhaes withdrew as well.


Kuiper was shifted to a later UFC card and set to fight Buddy Roberts. Of course things inevitably went from bad to worse, as Roberts was lost due illness two weeks out from the event. Finally, to top things off, Roberts' replacement Josh Janousek pulled out five days before fight night.


Kuiper was removed from the card, having lost four opponents over a span of less than two months.


"It was annoying to prepare for various fights and not be able to show my skills on those particular fight days," Kuiper admitted. "There is a lot of planning and preparation that goes into these bouts, and people that are close to me also make plans to travel.


"I just adjusted the training and moved forward the best one can do under such circumstances. "


By the time Kuiper squared off against Lawlor, he'd been sidelined for eight months, gameplanned for five potential opponents, and promptly lost in the second round.


Kuiper, though, isn't willing to blame his loss on the circumstances.


"The level of competition I had outside the UFC was competitive. It takes a little bit of time to adjust to the level fighters that are in the UFC, and I am a young fighter still," Kuiper said. "The thing is I learned a lot from the losses, and I truly believe I am a better and improved fighter as a result."


To say Kuiper's UFC tenure has not gone as planned would be a bit of an understatement. The middleweight prospect is an established finisher, having ended 11 of his 12 victories without help from the judges, yet he's been unable to gain traction with the general MMA fanbase thus far in his short stint.


Regardless he views Saturday night as an opportunity to amend that problem.


"We all fight on the same broadcast," Kuiper said. "American fans like most all MMA fans appreciate good fights and tough fighters.


"Other European fighters have also been very successful globally such as Stefan Struve, Gegard Mousasi, and Alistair Overeem. At the end of the day it is about making exciting fights. If I can do that, I am optimistic that the American fans will also welcome me," Kuiper concluded.


"(It's) just another day in the office to challenge myself and become a better competitor."


Source: http://www.mmafighting.com/2013/10/24/4991162/after-nightmare-road-to-last-fight-michael-kuiper-not-sweating-the
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BBC's iPlayer apps hit 20 million downloads, still aren't coming to the US

The BBC reports its iPlayer apps for Android and iOS have crossed a new milestone, with 20 million downloads total since launching back in 2011. Of course, that number might be a little inflated by certain individuals downloading it multiple times (our UK staff alone probably accounts for several ...


Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/kDGqFicptkQ/
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The Obamacare Tech Mess? It's A Familiar Government Story





Technical problems have plagued the Obama administration's HealthCare.gov website.



AP


Technical problems have plagued the Obama administration's HealthCare.gov website.


AP


By this point, it's all but a universally acknowledged truth that the launch of the HealthCare.gov website has been a failure.


That's bad news for President Obama and his health care law. But it's not exceptional when it comes to big government software programs and platforms.


Earlier this year, California ended a contract to modernize its payroll system, an effort that had eaten up 10 years and $250 million and gotten essentially nowhere. Colorado has had a number of high-profile embarrassments when upgrades to its revenue systems caused residents tax refund and car title problems, while Florida legislators last year scuttled a $70 million attempt to unify the state's email systems.


In fact, governments at every level — but particularly states and the feds — have suffered expensive, embarrassing flops when it came time to roll out new information technology projects.


"The bigger the system, the harder it is, because there are more variables," says Steve Kolodney, a former chief information officer for the state of Washington.


It isn't just size.


Private sector companies generate plenty of software flops, too. But the way governments typically manage computer projects — with diffuse authority, penny pinching and a deadly combination of delays and rigid deadlines — they're especially prone to producing disappointment.


No One Really In Charge


It doesn't seem like there should be any great trick to designing new systems. We've all become accustomed to using our computers or phones to easily order new barbecue sets along with a dozen out-of-print books, or to stream old sitcoms all weekend.


So why is it such a trick for government to get people signed up for health insurance or make appointments at the Department of Motor Vehicles?


There are a bunch of reasons. The first problem is that top-ranking government officials often expect these things to be easy. They come up with some application they want started up and then expect the IT guys and their vendors to make it happen.


It's like having no knowledge of what goes on under the hood, and then pulling into the dealership and asking the mechanics to design an entirely new car.


"They proudly announce that they don't understand the technology — 'My 14-year-old knows more than I do,' which is a moronic statement," says Gopal Kapur, founder of the Center for Project Management in California.


Legislators and agency heads may not know anything about lines of code, but that doesn't keep them from second-guessing the tech folks. They tend to view IT as a drain on resources and wonder why they have to keep buying new versions of software to keep up.


When it comes to government projects, Kapur says, people know they have to spend money in a given year because funding may dry up the following year. Planning for upgrades over, say, a three-year period just doesn't happen the way it should.


"Companies don't fall apart because a new CEO comes," he says. "If you go to a state, nobody does anything for a year before the governor's going to change, and then the year after nobody does anything because they don't know what the governor wants."


Keeping Up With The Times


Big government projects can take years to build, which means the world of technology will have changed dramatically since a given project began.


There's just been a new iPad released, for instance, but think about how important tablets have become in just the past few years. You wouldn't want to design a user interface today that didn't take into account mobile computing.


But governments typically don't budget for the need to overhaul entire project designs along the way. And, because of strict procurement rules, the IT staff may not be able to buy new products it needs, sometimes for more than a year at a stretch.


Meanwhile, policymakers keep asking for new features. There may be changes in law that have to be incorporated within a website. The budget deal that reopened the government this month, for instance, included stricter income verification requirements for people signing up for coverage under the health care law.


That's not why HealthCare.gov isn't working, but things like that happen all the time. It's as if a developer had to start construction of an office tower using an incomplete set of blueprints and then was told at the last minute to add another elevator shaft and a couple of bathrooms per floor.


Some people in the IT world like to argue it's never the technology that's at fault, it's the management.


"Good governance, not superior technical chops or ready access to alpha geeks, is how you build complex systems that deliver reliable and resilient value for money," Michael Schrage, a research fellow at the MIT Center for Digital Business, wrote in a Harvard Business Review blog post Tuesday.


Getting Ready In Time


There's no end to software snafus in the private sector. A filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission just last week outlined how a software bug led trading firm Knight Capital to lose $172,000 a second for 45 minutes.


Still, governments demand perfection in a way that private companies generally do not. Obama compared the health care website's problems to Apple, and that company's problems with its maps app show how even the best-run brands can run into trouble.


A better comparison might have been with Google, however, which releases beta versions of programs it knows will have bugs. That company relies on crowdsourcing to find and help fix any issues.


"That's not the model in government," says Doug Robinson, executive director of the National Association of State Chief Information Officers, or NASCIO.


"In government, you want to release something that's absolutely rock-solid perfect the day you release it to the market," Robinson says. "That might not be possible."


Knowing a big release date is coming — say, Oct. 1 for the exchanges at HealthCare.gov to go live — doesn't lead to new levels of quality control. Instead, problems are patched and may be overlooked by agency heads or other managers who just want to get the thing up and running.


A new website might have all the latest and zippiest features, but if it's having to talk to antiquated systems — as is often the case with back-end government operations, which differ wildly by agency — it still may not work.


"States certainly have had their fair share of projects that have failed or at least underperformed after tens or hundreds of millions have been spent," Robinson says.


Check The Vital Signs


To combat some of these problems, states such as California and Indiana are now making public what they call the "vital signs" of every major project, allowing politicians and the public to keep track of how every aspect of development is proceeding along the way.


It's like when the police release details about a case, but not necessarily every scrap such as the name of the victim, says Kapur, in hopes the public can offer information that might help the case.


The government itself, however, is ultimately responsible. That's why it was important that the president himself came out on Monday and took his lumps about HealthCare.gov's failures, Kapur says.


Often, it's the IT people who are forced to face the cameras. They have to explain why things aren't working, but typically lack the power to make changes that can turn a project around.


"They can find the problems and report the problems, but they don't have the political or administrative authority to change what is causing the problems," Kapur says.


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/alltechconsidered/2013/10/23/240247394/the-obamacare-tech-mess-its-a-familiar-government-story?ft=1&f=1014
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Labor talks to resume on fourth day of San Francisco transit strike


By Laila Kearney


SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Unions representing striking San Francisco-area transit workers agreed with management on Monday to resume stalled labor negotiations in hopes of ending a 4-day-old walkout by more than 2,000 commuter rail employees, transit agency officials said.


The renewed contract talks, to be held under the guidance of a federal mediator, mark the first round of bargaining since Bay Area Rapid Transit, or BART, employees launched their strike on Friday after talks broke down over wages and workplace rules.


The resumption of negotiations between management and the two unions involved - Service Employees International Union (SEIU) Local 1021 and the Amalgamated Transit Union Local 1555 - were expected to begin Monday afternoon, BART spokesman Rick Rice said.


"The mediator is facilitating a meeting this afternoon and we are hoping to reach an agreement," Rice said. "If we can reach an agreement by 6 p.m., we can have train service running tomorrow morning."


There was no immediate comment from union officials, but they planned to hold a news conference later in the afternoon.


The strike has idled a commuter rail system that serves 400,000 riders a day in San Francisco, Oakland and outlying suburbs, causing severe rush-hour gridlock in one of the most traffic-clogged cities in the United States.


For months, BART management and employee unions have been at odds over pay and benefits for union workers who are demanding large pay raises, in part to offset being asked to contribute to their pensions and pay more for healthcare.


Under the terms of the last contract proposal made public, BART said it offered a 12 percent pay raise over four years. According to management, BART workers earn $79,000 a year on average, plus benefits. The unions put the average worker's salary at $64,000.


Union representatives had said late on Sunday that they had delivered a "new counterproposal" to management offering flexibility on rules governing workplace technology, but no details were disclosed.


The BART walkout is the second this year after unionized workers went on strike for 4-1/2 days in July, until Democratic Governor Jerry Brown obtained a court order imposing a 60-day cooling-off period aimed at giving the two sides more time to reach a settlement.


Vigils were held on Sunday in honor of two workers who were struck and killed by a train as they checked a section of the track over the weekend. The National Transportation Safety Board began an investigation of the incident on Sunday.


(This story is corrected with duration of cooling-off period to 60 days, instead of 90, in 10th paragraph)


(Additional reporting by Noel Randewich in San Francisco; Writing by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Cynthia Johnston and Diane Craft)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/commuter-rail-strike-tests-san-franciscans-patience-201107599--sector.html
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Dolly Parton suffers minor injuries in car crash




FILE - This Jan. 19, 2012 file photo shows entertainer Dolly Parton during a news conference in Nashville, Tenn., to announce plans for a water-snow park. Parton was treated and released at a Nashville, Tenn., hospital Monday, Oct. 21, 2013, after a car she was riding in was involved in an accident. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey, File)





NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Dolly Parton is home resting after being treated and released for minor injuries she suffered in a car crash she described as "a fender bender."

Kirt Webster says Parton was already home Monday afternoon following the accident that happened shortly before noon CDT in Nashville, Tenn. Parton says in a statement that she's "all good. Just a little tired and sore."

Police say the 67-year-old Country Music Hall of Fame member was riding in an SUV that was hit by another vehicle. Parton and the two others were taken to local hospitals for treatment. A news release says none of the injuries appeared serious.

___

Online:

http://dollyparton.com

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/dolly-parton-suffers-minor-injuries-car-crash-211516562.html
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U.K. Official Urges U.S. Government To Adopt A Digital Core





A wall of tasks at the offices of the U.K.'s Government Digital Service.



Paul Clarke/Flickr


A wall of tasks at the offices of the U.K.'s Government Digital Service.


Paul Clarke/Flickr


When he read about the technical failures plaguing HealthCare.gov, Mike Bracken said it felt like a real-life version of the movie Groundhog Day. During the past decade, the government in the United Kingdom faced a string of public, embarrassing and costly IT failures. Finally, a monster technical fiasco — a failed upgrade for the National Health Service — led to an overhaul of the way the British government approached technology.


Instead of writing behemoth, long-term contracts with a long list of specifications for outside contractors, Parliament greenlighted the creation of the Government Digital Service, a "go-team" of 300 technologists who began streamlining 90 percent of the most common transactions the British people have with government. It appointed Bracken, a tech industry veteran, as the first ever executive director of digital — a Cabinet-level position.





Mike Bracken is executive director of digital for the U.K. government.



Lisbon Council/Flickr


Mike Bracken is executive director of digital for the U.K. government.


Lisbon Council/Flickr


Two years later, gov.uk is a single, simple platform connecting the hundreds of British agencies and allowing people to pay taxes, register for student loans, renew passports and more. Doing technology this way is saving British taxpayers at least $20 million a year, according to government estimates.


Not everyone is onboard with the reforms. For one, becoming "digital by default" means those who prefer a more analog relationship with government services are forced to adapt. And one of Bracken's biggest critics is a man named Tim Gregory. He argues that putting technologists at the heart of government stifles business investment in the U.K. Gregory is the U.K. president of CGI, the global contractor whose American arm was the biggest contractor on HealthCare.gov. (Bracken calls Gregory's complaint "beyond parody.")


The energetic digital chief was in Washington, D.C., this week to speak with the Presidential Innovation Fellows, some of whom are part of the "tech surge" aimed at helping fix the system. He sat down with me for an extended chat about the "not sexy" heart of the HealthCare.gov failure, his hopes for what comes from this crisis and the lessons he learned abroad that could help the U.S. (The interview has been edited for length and clarity.)


What does being "director of digital in the U.K." mean?


Great question. That means I am responsible for making public services digital by default in the U.K.


How did you come to be in this role?


I'm the first person in this role, and the position has existed since mid-2011. It came about because of a report written between Martha Lane Fox, who is [a] digital champion [in] the U.K. and an entrepreneur, and Francis Maude of the Minister of the Cabinet's office. The report's called Digital by Default and it recommended four things: that government has a digital center as its heart, [as] it never had one of those before; digital capacity and new digital skills right at the heart of government ... and then [that] it fix publishing, fix all its transactions, make them both digital by default; and then finally, link them all up with open data.



Why was there a need for government to have a digital heart?




My fear is that governments continue to see technology as big white elephants, that you create a service and then you leave it. You have to take a different approach.





We have grown accustomed to too many technology failures in government, and also our digital services aren't keeping up with digital services outside of government. In the U.K. it's widely accepted that our public services are pretty good. We're a reasonably populous country at 70 million people. We have a long tradition of public services. We do an awful lot of different types of public services to a high standard. Yet it's also accepted that when it comes to transposing those to a digital world, our services lack a little bit in quality. It's not for want of spending money on technology, but in comparison to things like booking airline tickets or buying books or all the stuff we do in our daily lives that government services and public services are not keeping pace.


How did the U.K. arrive at this conclusion?


Well, it arrived at it over time, to be fair. Throughout the 2000s. But one of the critical events was in late 2008, 2009. We had yet another big ... IT program ... this one called NHS IT — the National Health Service. It's not actually under [me]. It's outside of central government. But there'd been a massive multibillion-pound IT program, [and it] hadn't yielded good results. And I think that was the moment when both politicians and civil servants felt, it's time to try another tack here. Because pouring money into these big IT programs just isn't yielding great results.


And when you say "isn't yielding great results," what was happening where we might be able to sort of see some parallels?


Well, a bunch of things were happening. We were getting too bogged down in long-term multiyear procurements. We were trying to predict the future in a digital world that's changing rapidly. Because we were trying to buy things with five, eight, 10-year cycles, we just couldn't possibly keep pace with what was happening. Also we weren't getting good values as a result of that. We were trying to outsource the whole thing into a certain contract type and weren't really in control of that. And the final thing is, you weren't able to react to user need. Users' needs change. Because we were locked into these big timelines and because we were costing a lot of money, we couldn't react to users' needs and actually to changing policy needs.


So all those factors combined to really create an inertia at the center of government, and to unlock that inertia you need many different things. But the critical thing you need is delivery skills. You need a new younger generation. Not just a younger generation but younger skills. It's like the Internet generation. You can create stuff really quickly, that can get stuff out the door maybe in alphas and betas, try early projects, and iterate and change them depending on user need. ... And that's a fundamentally different model than trying to predict the future and buy your way out of it with big contracts. We've had to really unpick some learned behavior that government's had for the best part of 20 years.


In the U.S. we have a chief technology officer, Todd Park. And there's been smaller initiatives like the Presidential Innovation Fellows. How is what Todd Park does or the "power" that he's given different from what you've been given?


Todd Park is an amazing person and his enthusiasm and his skill show through and he's great. However, I think that one of the issues that you have here and other countries have is the absence of a delivery capacity — the absence of being able to put your hand on teams of highly skilled, multidisciplinary technical and digital and policy people and deploy them at points of real urgency means that Todd can only be as good as his influencing skills to the existing supplies and the existing contracts. They need rooting around and doing differently. And that's a fundamental problem.





Todd Park is the U.S. government's chief technology officer.



JD Lasica/Flickr


Todd Park is the U.S. government's chief technology officer.


JD Lasica/Flickr


Government only has a finite amount of delivery capacity. In a world of policy, in a world of political imperatives, the next big thing comes along and your best people have moved on to that. So unless people like Todd Park have an organization and a structure and skills like we have in [Government Digital Services], then I don't see how they're ever going to be able to really structurally change some of the problems you have. And I do think that will lead to more and more experiences like the one you're potentially having right now with HealthCare.gov.


There's good signs here. Jen Pahlka has come on from Code for America for a year. And if she's given the backing and the team to build the sort of mini GDS or macro GDS, that's great. There's the Presidential Innovation Fellows. There's plenty of places where you could put these skills in the center, but until you actually have them in substantial number — we have 300 in the U.K. — ... then I fear that you'll always be working through it through influence, however talented some of your technology leaders are.


I imagine one of the reasons your government arrived at this is cost?


Yes. So it saves us huge amounts of money. So when we have that team, the way we deploy them — there's still a finite resource; it's still not enough. Because government is quite a distributed thing as I'm sure it is here ... the first thing we did was create a common platform so everyone in government can use it. That's called gov.uk. So if you go to www.gov.uk now, it's one country, it's a domain for the entire country. There's still some agencies to come onboard, but most of the big departments are done. ... In the next year all of government will be on it.


Right now in the U.S., we have a bunch of agencies, hundreds of agencies, but they contract out for their own sites and their own dashboards and their own content management systems.


The problem that everyone in government as a user has is, you don't just get information from government. You transact. And we all know the big stuff — driver's licenses, passports. Governments are pretty much the same the world over. They do roughly the same stuff. So using that finite number of those 300, what we've done is gone after 25 of the top 50 transactions in U.K. government. The top 50 account for 97 percent of volume. And you can guess what they are. I've mentioned some: passports, driver's license, tax, health care, all this stuff.


What is your reaction to HealthCare.gov and what you're reading and seeing regarding failures of what was meant to be an Expedia shopping for health coverage?


Yeah ... I'll say this with no sense of enjoyment whatsoever, but it feels a bit like Groundhog Day to where we were three or four years ago. Hundreds of millions of dollars, large-scale IT enterprise technology, no real user testing, no real focus on end users, all done behind a black box, and not in an agile way but in a big waterfall way, which is a software methodology. And basically not proven good value, and I'm afraid to say I've got example after example in the U.K. in the past where we've had that experience. So it looks just like one of those.


My hope is that the current shockwaves of what you're going through here are strong enough to implement a new approach and actually to get political will behind having digital skills in the center. Because delivery is the only thing that will solve this problem. I've not been thrilled so far by the response in terms of the view of technology that you can send one or two or a whole fleet of people and then crack this problem. The real problem is systemic. You actually can't build technology like this. Technologies aren't things that are binary. You don't procure them. They're living systems and you have to have people who look after them and develop them iteratively and change and grow with them and you need those skills in the heart of government.


What is your fear? What does the shockwave reaction now portend for us?


You're destined to repeat the problem. This is something that governments have done all the time. Very few have them have this public [attention]. So often projects like this can be sort of quietly shelved and buried in hundreds of millions of pounds or quietly put through on the side. And because end users aren't touched by them there isn't, if you like, an outcry or so much of a view. This is different now. So, my fear is that governments continue to see technology as big white elephants, that you create a service and then you leave it. You have to take a different approach. Reform of procurement is the elephant in the room. If there aren't steps to take substantial procurement reform then that's a problem. Procurement reform is the killer for any dinner party conversation. I recognize that.


Not a sexy topic.


Not a sexy topic, but it's so important because we can't keep buying technology like we're buying bridges or we're buying motorways. It's not the same stuff. It's much more involved in its faces and users. We have to be much smarter about it and we must have in governments all over the world, I'd say, the skills at the heart of government ... skills to understand how to use technology. By the way, I don't mean do it all yourselves. ... You should use suppliers, use vendors, use the best that's out there. But not in this sort of one-size-fits-all kind of way.


You were here in Washington to speak with the Presidential Innovation Fellows, a group that I'm sure you're very supportive of. What was your message to those folks? What were you here to say to them?


I was giving them a bit of feedback from the three years we've had at this. The first was, go at the big stuff quickly. Do the stuff that matters. Solve the big problems around procurement. Make sure we get digital capacity into the heart of government. Start to look at end user services.


Get the data for your services and put them in the public domain ... how many people applied for benefits today? How many people were successful? Those people who weren't successful, why did they fail? Use that as a baseline and try to drive services. Too often, and this country's no different, I talk to CTOs and CIOs and they say, "I've got all that data." Great. Bully for you. Well, publish it. Let everyone have a look at it. Because actually it's not technology data. It's data about public services, and we all pay for them.


Finally, the president said Monday that the policy of health care reform is not the website. How would you characterize the relationship between what government services purport to do and how much they're dependent on the technological systems?


It is the prevalent distribution model of our time. I don't think you would hear politicians say, "Well, the government buildings, they're not the government," because you have to go to government buildings to transact with them. So websites, digital channels, mobile services, applications, APIs, they are the government. And that's a critical thing. Digital services are public services. The Web services are indivisible from public services. And that's a generational message that I think the Web generation understands. And potentially because we've thought of technology as procurement for so long, that message has been missed in political circles.


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/alltechconsidered/2013/10/23/240268497/u-k-official-urges-u-s-government-to-adopt-a-digital-core?ft=1&f=1019
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SlingPlayer gets AirPlay support, Blockbuster arrives on SlingBox 500 in new update

Sling Media has just rolled out an update that brings a number of improvements to the Slingbox 500 and to the SlingPlayer app. For the Slingbox 500, Blockbuster On Demand is now available as a premium video service along with a new My Media feature that lets users access media via a USB drive. Only ...


Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/hPHRfAT4dJE/
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Tom Cruise Reteaming With 'Oblivion' Director for 'Go Like Hell'



Tom Cruise is reteaming with his Oblivion director Joseph Kosinski for Go Like Hell, a racing drama set up at Fox.



The project tells the true story of the competition between the Ford Motor Company and Italian sports car designer Enzo Ferrari, which culminated at the 1966 Le Mans race.


PHOTOS: Buff Bods Over 40: 7 Actors With Ripped Physiques
 
It is based on the book Go Like Hell: Ford, Ferrari and Their Battle for Speed and Glory at Le Mans, written by A.J. Baime and published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt in 2009.


Michael Mann was once attached to direct the project.
 
The project is in the early development stages and the script is likely to be overhauled to suit the stylings of Cruise and Kosinski. The studio is said to be making this a high priority with a plan of getting it before cameras next year.


Lucas Foster and Alec Young are producing.


 

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/news/~3/Bwq3wkmbhrA/tom-cruise-reteaming-oblivion-director-650523
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Xbox One Kinect shrinks minimum distance requirement to 4.6 feet



Microsoft said it improved Kinect on the Xbox One, and now a leaked setup manual indicates how little space it requires to operate. The PDF NeoGAF spotted notes that a minimum 1.4 meters (just over 4.5-feet) between the user and Microsoft's new do-all sensor is all that's required. For those of us with cozy living quarters, this could be a bit more generous than the last one's recommended six to eight-foot gap. We've reached out to Microsoft for an official comment and will update this post if we hear back. Until then however, we're hoping that November 22nd will mark the end of us rearranging our living room to play the latest Dance Central.


DNP Leaked Xbox One manual notes shorter gaps between the Kinect and you are feasible


Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/10/23/xbox-one-kinect-needs-less-distance/?ncid=rss_truncated
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Wednesday, October 23, 2013

McConnell wins praise from some in Kentucky

FILE - In this Oct. 15, 2013 file photo, Senate Minority Leader Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky. walks on Capitol Hill in Washington. In the midst of a double-barreled re-election fight, Mitch McConnell is earning praise back home _ and from some of the most unlikely of corners _ for brokering of the deal that ended the partial government shutdown and averted a potential default on U.S. debt. (AP Photo/ Evan Vucci, File)







FILE - In this Oct. 15, 2013 file photo, Senate Minority Leader Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky. walks on Capitol Hill in Washington. In the midst of a double-barreled re-election fight, Mitch McConnell is earning praise back home _ and from some of the most unlikely of corners _ for brokering of the deal that ended the partial government shutdown and averted a potential default on U.S. debt. (AP Photo/ Evan Vucci, File)







FILE - In this Aug. 3, 2013 file photo, Louisville businessman Matt Bevin, the Senate primary election opponent of Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Ky. speaks in in Fancy Farm, Ky. In the midst of a double-barreled re-election fight,McConnell is earning praise back home _ and from some of the most unlikely of corners _ for brokering of the deal that ended the partial government shutdown and averted a potential default on U.S. debt. (AP Photo/Stephen Lance Dennee)







(AP) — In the midst of a double-barreled re-election fight, Mitch McConnell is earning praise back home from some unlikely corners for brokering the deal that ended the partial government shutdown and averted a potential default on U.S. debt.

"He did yeoman's work making sure this thing got fixed," said Owensboro tobacco farmer Rod Kuegal, a Democrat.

Newspaper opinion pages that typically disagree with McConnell also give him positive marks. Among them: the Lexington Herald-Leader, which said McConnell "does deserve credit for what he does best — managing in the real, messy world of democratic government."

While McConnell may have temporarily hushed Democratic foes who call him "the guardian of gridlock," his collaboration with Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., to break the impasse again riled tea party Republicans and other conservatives who long have criticized him.

"We're feeling betrayed," says Tim Isaac, a tea party Republican in Wilmore who owns a small information technology company. "Either he's one of us or he's not, and based on what he did," he's not.

By deciding to work with Democrats, McConnell became the latest Republican to show a willingness to risk the ire of tea partyers by making the pragmatic decision rather than the ideologically pure one. Earlier this week, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie stopped fighting legal gay marriage in his state, angering parts of the GOP's conservative base but endearing him to others across the political spectrum.

Even Republican allies say McConnell faced a tough choice as the shutdown entered a third week.

He could stand firm with conservative demands for more spending cuts — a move that could help overcome a challenge from tea party-backed Matt Bevin — while angering everyone else he'd need to win another term. Or he could look to next fall and broker a deal with Democrats. That would enrage the tea party but endear himself to the broader electorate of independents and moderates whose backing he will need in the general election against Democrat Alison Lundergan Grimes

In the end, McConnell's decision suggested a confidence that he can overcome such gripes from the tea party, which has never fully warmed to him. It also reflected his campaign's belief that he'll ultimately win the primary over Bevin and will face a tougher fight from Grimes in the general election next fall.

One year out, the electoral environment is shaping up to be difficult for Republicans.

Voters of all stripes are fed up with gridlock in Washington. And national polls show that Americans overwhelmingly blame the GOP for the standoff.

That could be a potential problem for McConnell, the top Senate Republican who is seeking his sixth term and is deeply unpopular in the state.

But McConnell's shutdown maneuvering may have undercut that argument, even though Democrats have spent nearly $1 million on TV ads this year painting him as "Sen. Gridlock.

Grimes, McConnell's chief Democratic challenger claims McConnell had hidden in the shadows through much of the debt-ceiling debate until it was nearly too late. She argued the five-term senator opted to negotiate only because of political pressure back home, and that he now "is attempting to pat himself on the back for finally deciding to do his job."

Tea party activists say McConnell will be punished for compromising instead of siding with tea party lawmakers. They were demanding that any deal to end the shutdown include provisions gutting funding for President Barack Obama's health care law.

Bevin, a Louisville businessman and McConnell's underfunded primary opponent, charged that he "negotiated the GOP surrender" despite his promise that he "would fight to eliminate Obamacare 'root and branch.'

And, within days of the deal being struck, the Senate Conservatives Fund, a conservative group sharply critical of the budget deal and that had been hammering McConnell in TV ads, promised to work on Bevin's behalf.

That criticism aside, voters from various quarters say they give him credit for being the go-to guy for hammering out bipartisan agreements.

Robert Myer, a Democrat who is the co-owner of a Mayfield lumber company, applauded McConnell for helping end the shutdown and says he had few options because of Obama's unwillingness to negotiate.

"I'm more appalled at Obama for doing nothing," he said.

Other Democrats also give McConnell credit for deftly handling the situation.

"Somebody had to give in ... At least old Mitch was wily enough to get something for Kentucky out of it, even if he had to cave," said retired teacher June Rice.

Kuegal, the Owensboro farmer, gave McConnell credit for a nearly $2.9 billion appropriation to replace the Olmsted Lock and Dam on the Ohio River between Kentucky and Illinois, saying: "That was pretty amazing."

But while McConnell supported the money, Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., chairwoman of the appropriations committee that handles spending on water projects, and Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., the top Republican on that panel, got the provision in the budget agreement.

McConnell got credit for the deal from The Independent, in the Ohio River city of Ashland, which said in an editorial: "Our reasoning is simple: Allowing the federal government to default on its loan obligations or killing a project that is critical to transporting goods on the Ohio River had the potential of devastating the economy of this region."

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-10-23-US-Budget-Battle-McConnell/id-d469bfc6fe0645a088f91c90c9ffeb2e
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