THE RACE: Non-vets Obama and Romney court US vets

July 23, 2012 by admin · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Politics 

Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, speaks at a campaign event in Bow, N.H., Friday, July 20, 2012. Romney auditions on the international stage next week as he travels to England, Israel and Poland looking to establish credibility as a potential commander in chief in his challenge to President Barack Obama. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)The race between President Barack Obama and Republican rival Mitt Romney marks the first time since World War II that neither major-party candidate has had any military experience.

The original article and other great content can be found at this URL: http://news.yahoo.com/race-non-vets-obama-romney-court-us-vets-183351940.html

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At VFW, Obama defends foreign policy record

July 23, 2012 by admin · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Politics 

President Barack Obama speaks at the 113th National Convention of the VFW in Reno, Nev., Monday, July 23, 2012. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)Plunging back into divisive politics, President Barack Obama on Monday declared he has kept the United States safe while suggesting that Republican Mitt Romney has offered little to show he is ready to be commander in chief. Mere days after a massacre in Colorado silenced the campaign in deference to the grieving, the bruising fight was on again.

The original article and other great content can be found at this URL: http://news.yahoo.com/vfw-obama-defends-foreign-policy-record-200619684.html

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Amazon plans for ‘five or six’ new tablets, will include 10-inch model, says Staples president

July 23, 2012 by admin · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Technology & Science 

While we expect Amazon to refresh its Kindle Fire tablet sooner rather than later, Demos Parneros, president of US retail for Staples, has told Reuters that the online book-seller has bigger plans, and aims to introduce five or six new devices. According to the exec, the tablets will come in a range of sizes and would include a new ten-inch device — going directly against another popular 10-inch slab. No word on whether these five or six device would include a smartphone, as screen sizes get increasingly closer. Amazon has also announced that it’ll be creating a new R&D hub in London, focusing on its services and APIs for TVs, consoles, smartphones and PCs, aimed squarely at rolling these out across the globe. The original Kindle Fire — and its Android app store — is still not available outside of America. However, public plans for the new Amazon base currently center on relocating both Lovefilm and Pushbutton to this new hub. However, it’s been about a year; about time for Europe to get a taste of Amazon’s wallet-friendly tab.

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Amazon plans for ‘five or six’ new tablets, will include 10-inch model, says Staples president originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 23 Jul 2012 08:35:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceReuters, TechCrunch  | Email this | Comments

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Plex Android app updated with remote control from mobile devices, new transcoding

July 23, 2012 by admin · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Technology & Science 

Plex Android app updated with remote control from mobile devices, new transcoding

While it was exciting to hear that XBMC is making its way to Android, the Plex media center has been on the platform since last year and was recently updated with a few new features. Version 2.2.0.5 of the $5 app adds the ability to accept remote control commands from any of the company’s other mobile clients, so if your phone or tablet is dangling from the TV, you can still control playback or browse media without getting up. Also new is the “QuickSilver” media transcoder from the latest Plex Media Server release which we’re assured we will hear more about in the future, it’s currently expected to provide improved video quality, particularly on the Kindle Fire. Since the feature is still experimental you’ll have to specifically enable it in the settings menu, hit the official blog for more details on how to get it running, the full changelog and newly expanded list of devices that support HTTP Live Streaming.

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Plex Android app updated with remote control from mobile devices, new transcoding originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 23 Jul 2012 08:17:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceDarrin’s Blog, Google Play  | Email this | Comments

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Proview sued by its iPad court case law firm, owes 2.4 million dollars in legal fees

July 23, 2012 by admin · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Technology & Science 

Proview sued by its iPad court case law firm, owes 24 million dollars in legal fees

Guess who’s hasn’t yet gotten its share of Proview’s recently acquired $60 million? Ironically, it’s the lawyers that helped it win the iPad trademark dispute in China. According to Sina Tech, Grandall Law Firm confirmed that its shady client refused to pay up the promised 4 percent of Apple’s settlement fee, which equates to $2.4 million. While acknowledging their contractual arrangement (wherein the law firm covers the legal fees in advance, and then expect the client to pay up after winning the case), Proview founder Yang Rongshan told Sina Tech that Grandall’s behavior is “nonsense,” and that his company isn’t obliged to pay back immediately as it isn’t under normal operation right now. However, Yang promises Proview won’t “pass the buck.” We shall see about that.

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Proview sued by its iPad court case law firm, owes 2.4 million dollars in legal fees originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 22 Jul 2012 22:36:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceSina Tech (translated)  | Email this | Comments

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Maureen Ryan: ‘Breaking Bad’ Recap: Mike Has A Bad Day

July 23, 2012 by admin · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Entertainment 

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Note: Do not read on unless you’ve seen Season 5, Episode 2 of AMC’s “Breaking Bad,” entitled “Madrigal.”

Free will is something that “Breaking Bad” likes to examine under its microscope (i.e., its unblinking camera eye). The show has a spooky ability to quietly observe the most heinous acts of violence and greed, and silently dissect the rationales that people use to justify those actions. And it’s hard to escape the conclusion that these characters have often had choices available to them. They’ve just, for various reasons, made bad choices.

But the point is, they could have done something else. At the very least, they could have told themselves the truth about the choices they did make.

Mike, in the first two episodes of this season, continually tells Jesse just what an idiot he’s being by sticking with Walt. Once Skyler knew the full extent of Walt’s operation, she could have taken her kids and run. She did sort of try to do that once, but she came back. Walt himself is reminded by Saul in this episode that he was lucky to escape his showdown with Gus alive — and that he should just take that good fortune and get the hell out of Dodge.

Given the opportunity to cut their losses and go forward with what they have, the characters time and again choose another path, one that, more or less, revolves around a need. For Jesse, it’s the need to have the acceptance of a father figure. For Skyler, it’s the need for money for her family’s future and at least one parent who wasn’t in jail or dead. Walt’s choices are motivated, of course, by pure greed and ego; his speech about “gold” in Saul’s office was yet another reminder that any pretense of nobly salting away money for his family is long gone.

Both Mike and the Madrigal executive in the opening scenes made choices as well, ones that either are or probably will be fatal. At least the Madrigal executive got to choose the manner of his exit. (Trust “Breaking Bad” to make the dilemmas of a German man we’d never met and who said almost nothing instantly compelling. Nothing like the mindless consumption of “Franch” to communicate existential dread.)

Mike made a choice too, and the reason we like this guy is because he’s one of the few characters on this show who is not deluding himself. He’s got nervous Lydia and her kill list on one side of him and the cops — who have the same list, apparently — on the other. He knows allying himself with Walt and Jesse is probably a terrible idea, but it’s the best of a very bad set of options, and it might give him a temporary chance to evade prison and avoid a hit man’s bullet.

Free will, fate, good and evil — these are the themes that season “Breaking Bad” like a tangy B.B.Q. sauce. But the detail that resonated with me most when it came to the Big Ideas was this: There were 12 names on the police’s list of Gus Fring’s associates — and Lydia had a list that was 11 names long, 12 if you counted Mike himself.

Gus Fring and his 12 disciples? Surely that number can’t be an accident; very little is in the universe of “Breaking Bad.”

If you want to play around with Christian analogies, you could say that these men — not to mention Jesse and Walt — long ago chose to damn themselves to Hell. Yet I can’t detect a whiff of determinism in this show. Every character could have extricated him or herself from any number of challenging situations and difficult paths — but doing so would have required a sacrifice of some kind, a price to be paid. Inactivity, greed or the easier, less painful path were always more powerful lures. Choosing the expedient option shouldn’t “get easier,” as Walt chillingly promised Skyler it would. The fact that these choices are hard reminds us that we have consciences, and every word Walt said reminded her that he no longer listens to his conscience — if he even has one these days.

Mike seems fairly sure of the price he will eventually pay, but he already has a long list of sins on his moral roster, and getting into business with Walt and Jesse might be the only way he can ensure the future of the little girl in his life — and the one in Lydia’s. Walt might be done looking out for his family — and unaware how much the mother of his little girl despises and fears him — but Mike and Lydia are united by the fact that loving other people sometimes restricts your options.

So Walt is choosing to act as if he’s unfettered, while Lydia and Mike are willing to sacrifice themselves for others. Using free will for those kinds of actions — not for the collection of the gold that litters the streets — doesn’t make them good people; it makes them compromised people who are, at least, trying to limit the damage they do to others.

Cosmic justice, free will and destiny are big ideas, and it was especially smart of “Breaking Bad” to use Mike as the vehicle for this hour. Jonathan Banks’ Mike — how I love that hangdog face — is a man with few illusions about who he is or what he wants, and the dry wit with which he delivered his lines was especially enjoyable here.

Mike isn’t just likable because he’s trying to protect his little girl, or because he feels compassion for Lydia’s daughter, or because he gave the hit man who came after him a moment to compose himself (”Are you ready?”) before killing him. Mike’s someone we root for because he’s at least aware of the price that others are paying.

And unlike the men who work for him, he really is solid.

A few more notes and notable lines:

  • Anyone else half-expect Don Draper to start yelling at Peggy Olson in the test-kitchen scene?
  • Anyone know where I can get some “Franch”?
  • RIP Pollos Hermanos: The busy Germans at Madrigal were taking down the Chicken Man’s sign as the company’s executive prepared to electrocute himself.
  • One way to think about “Breaking Bad”: A long con of Jesse. Jane’s death, the poison, the Season 4 showdown in which Jesse almost shot Walt, and now Walt placing the poison cigarette inside the Roomba — the deceptions that Walt has perpetrated are epic. And I wonder — how important is it for Jesse to know the full extent of Walt’s lies before the show is over for good?
  • Follow-up question: Is the Roomba really orchestrating this whole thing?
  • “How many Krauts we got?” “Enough to invade Poland.”
  • So was Schuler really “an anomaly” within the Madrigal corporation? Or does the chain of illegality go much, much higher? Lydia’s presence seems to indicate that we haven’t seen the last of the Madrigal executive roster.
  • The gleaming perfection of the German test kitchen, the array of flavors and colors, the beautiful control and economy used in those opening scenes — that whole sequence by director Michelle McLaren was a distillation of everything the show does well, and another analogy for the ideas at its heart: What if all the good things around you turned tasteless and meaningless because of the choices you’ve made?
  • “You are a time bomb. Tick, tick, tick.”
  • “He was somebody else completely, right in front of me.” Another question for the rest of the season: How important is it for us to see Hank begin to suspect Walt? So far his dogged police work has kept him on Heisenberg’s trail, but how long will Walt continue to fool his brother-in-law — and again, how important is it for Hank to know the full extent of Walt’s actions before the show ends for good? These are things I think about after watching the show.
  • I was completely distracted in the diner scene not just by Lydia’s giant shades and her comical attempts at espionage, but by the sign on the table advertising “Funnel cake fries.” I would very much like to know if these actually exist.
  • As if he’s making award-winning B.B.Q. sauce or Franch dressing, Walt indignantly reacts to the idea of changing the formulation of his product. He’s fine with murder, theft, lying and violence. But my God, don’t make him dilute the product!
  • The sequence in which Mike hung the rotating toy on the door was another mini-master class in the creation of suspense. I love that “Breaking Bad” never resorts to the obvious when coming up with those sequences.
  • “There’s no better reason than family.” Creepiest — and most false — thing Walt’s ever said?

The original article and other great content can be found at this URL: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/maureen-ryan/breaking-bad-recap_b_1690710.html?utm_hp_ref=tv

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