Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Crazy Things People Do in Their Sleep


Sleep walking can be embarrassing – especially if you happen to, say, wander onto the subway tracks in Boston and stir up a panic among fellow commuters who have to rescue you.



That's what happened to one Boston woman earlier this week in the city's Davis Square station. The woman told first responders she fell asleep on a station bench and woke up on the tracks, according to Massachusetts Bay Transit Authority officials.



The woman escaped with only an arm injury because no train was coming when she fell, officials said.



On the bright side, she didn't sleep-swim, sleep-have-sex-with-anyone or sleep-shoot-herself-in-the-knee.



Click through to check out some more wacky things people have done in their sleep.




5 Crazy Things People Do in Their Sleep



There have been a few people who reported sleep walking outside and going for a swim. A New Hampshire woman did it twice last summer, landing the in the hospital with hypothermia the second time. She would sleep-walk to the door, unlock it, and wind up in the river.


"It's definitely scary and it worries me," 31-year-old Alyson Bair told ABC News at the time. "I haven't tried to drive or anything yet, but it just scares me what I could do. We've locked up all my medicines and made sure that our guns are locked up. Everything I could harm myself with is put away because I don't know what I'm going to do when I'm sleeping."


Read the full story here.

5 Crazy Things People Do in Their Sleep



People who have sex when they're completely asleep typically don't remember it the next morning, which can understandably freak out their partners.


It's called sexomnia, and doctors have said they think its underreported because people don't want to talk about it.


Watch this couple talk about how baffled they were about sleep sex.

5 Crazy Things People Do in Their Sleep



Sleep-driving may sound like a stretch, but it's actually not so rare.


The Food and Drug Administration asked for a label change because people taking Ambien, a sleep medication, often got behind the wheel without being fully awake.


By definition, the driver often doesn't remember driving after he or she wakes up, according to the FDA.

5 Crazy Things People Do in Their Sleep

Sleep-shooting-yourself-in-the-knee


A New Hampshire man woke up over the summer thinking that he'd just been having a nightmare about guns.


Instead, he looked down to discover that he was holding a gun and had shot himself in the knee.


Read the full story here.


Source: http://abcnews.go.com/Health/sleep-walking-crazy-things-people-sleep/story?id=20648045
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Obamacare Is Much More Than a Web Site


On Oct. 1, the Affordable Care Act's Marketplace — a new way to apply for, browse and buy affordable health insurance plans — opened for business.



One way to buy these plans in many states is a new website, HealthCare.gov. As you've probably heard, it's not working as well as it's supposed to just yet. As President Obama said Monday, that's inexcusable. And he's fully focused on fixing the problem as soon as possible.





Source: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/2013/10/22/obamacare_is_much_more_than_a_web_site_318328.html
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Disaster Planning Often Overlooks Disabled (Voice Of America)

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Greek police release photos of abduction suspects


ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Greek police released photographs of a couple charged with abducting a girl and judicial authorities put the pair in pre-trial custody Monday as an international search for the child's parents intensified.

Investigators in Greece are considering everything from potential child trafficking to welfare scams to even simple charity as they seek the biological parents of the child known only as "Maria."

A 39-year-old man identified as Christos Salis and a 40-year-old woman who used the names Eleftheria Dimopoulou and Selini Sali were detained on charges of abduction and document fraud following their arrest last week.

Police found the girl when they raided a Gypsy, or Roma, encampment near the central Greek town of Farsala last week. Her DNA shows she is not the couple's child.

The case has triggered a global outpouring of sympathy and possible tips to police but no breakthrough yet in identifying her.

The "Smile of the Child" charity, which is caring for the girl, said it had received more than 8,000 calls and thousands of emails — some with details and photographs of missing children — from people in the United States, Scandinavia, other parts of Europe, Australia and South Africa.

"The case has touched a chord with lots of people from many countries," Panayiotis Pardalis, a spokesman for the charity, told The Associated Press on Monday. "This case is now giving hope to parents of missing children."

He said the charity had forwarded all tips to the police but most people were just conveying their concern.

A dental examination showed the child is older than previously thought, 5-6 years old instead of four, the charity said.

Interpol, the international police agency, has 38 girls younger than 6 on its missing persons database but none of them reportedly fit the mystery girl's description.

The story has resonated strongly in Britain, where the tabloid press drew parallels with missing girl Madeleine McCann, who disappeared at age three from a Portuguese resort six years ago. The mother of Ben Needham, a British boy missing in Greece since 1991, said she was thrilled by the news of the girl's recovery. Her toddler was 21 months old when he vanished on the island of Kos.

Police allege the woman who was detained claimed to have given birth to six children in less than 10 months, and 10 of the 14 children the couple had registered as their own are unaccounted for. It is not clear whether the 10 children are real or were made up to cheat the Greek welfare system.

Police say the two suspects received about 2,500 euros ($3,420) a month in subsidies from three different cities.

Police have raided dozens of Gypsy settlements across Greece in the last few weeks, including four more camps Monday in Athens and Thessaloniki.

___

Costas Kantouris in Thessaloniki, Lori Hinnant in Paris and Raphael Satter in London contributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/greek-police-release-photos-abduction-suspects-152806615.html
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Axes of Evil

131021_DX_AxeDaliaAndSon
If Axe is just for men (and boys), what effect does it have with a fortysomething woman?

Photo courtesy of Aaron Fein








Probably if I had watched the commercials first, I would never have undertaken this whole stupid experiment. Axe commercials? Awful. They are the media equivalent of the fragrance itself. I mean, naked ladies covered in tiny congruent triangles assault bemused middle managers. These are commercials that could have been made by Russian porn stars from the mid-1960s, or backstage at a Victoria’s Secret fashion show, if angels really liked feathers in their strawberry milkshakes. Nor did I come to Axe men’s fragrance by sniffing the air at the U.S. Supreme Court —no one at the solicitor general’s office wears the fragrance. (Who says government can’t do anything right?)











Dahlia Lithwick writes about the courts and the law for Slate. Follow her on Twitter.










Me, I discovered Axe the usual way, through my 13-year-old nephew, for whom the whole prospect of a lifetime of bom-chicka-wah-wah is perhaps still too much to contemplate.










My own boys, at 8 and 10, are too young for Axe, or for fragrance, or for wah-wahs of any variety—or so I shall insist to myself until they are about 40. But after a single day at the beach this past August, when they shared a bathroom with their big hockey-playing Axe-scented cousin-slash-hero, even the 8-year-old was smearing his small hairless self with the body wash, the deodorant, and, in case he still couldn’t be smelled from the next pier over, the spray cologne. I decided to handle this olfactory terrorism like a mature adult: several days of merciless teasing. Dinners quickly became unbearable, with three Axe-drenched young people fogging up all tastes and smells until your pasta simply tasted like the painful ache at the back of your tongue that occurs when every boy in the house sees a daily Axe dip as part of his grooming. On it went, until the final weekend at the beach, when I found myself trapped in the shower with only a bottle of three-in-one Axe ™ product (shampoo, body-wash, and conditioner). So I broke down and used it.










The Wall of Axe is a naturally occurring phenomenon in which teen boys reapply Axe after phys ed, then stand in the stairwell together.












Sunshine. Harps. It was the most sublimely powerful fragrance experience of my adult life. Truly. After decades of smelling like a flower or a fruit, for the first time ever, I smelled like teen boy spirit. I smelled the way an adolescent male smells when he feels that everything good in the universe is about to be delivered to him, possibly by girls in angel wings. I had never smelled this entitled in my life. I loved it. I wanted more.










When I first told my husband that I was planning on wearing only Axe men’s products for an entire week, his answer was a foreshadowing of things to come: “You’re planning on wearing that stuff to bed every night for a week? Man. Axe really does work. It’s only been a few minutes and look, you’re already single again ... ”










I confess that it was hard to choose a fragrance. My 13-year-old nephew advised me to steer clear of the “nasty grossness”-scented products. All of the Axe scents, to the extent that they differ, seem to be mostly named after manly activities like mining or soldering. Ultimately I opted for Cool Metal (see: mining and soldering) in the body wash, shampoo, and spray formulations.










What happens when a fortysomething women walks around smelling like a 13-year-old boy for a week? Mostly nothing. As it turns out, ours is a culture in which, as a general principle, people don’t really feel comfortable commenting on your scent, even when it is so powerful as to be causing climate change. So even if you apply Axe before a funeral—as I did—nobody is going to grab you by the arm and ask you to please leave. I wore a heavy coating of it to a dinner party one night. Eliciting no response, even when I started helpfully jamming my neck into the other guests’ noses, I did learn from several mothers that the Wall of Axe (a naturally occurring phenomenon in which eight or more teen boys reapply Axe after phys ed, then stand in the stairwell together) has become so bad at some local schools that it’s been banned altogether. Another guest described a perennial teen rite of passage—the agony of spraying Axe down your own pants for the first time.













131021_DX_AxeCoolMetal

Photo courtesy AXE/Unilever








Despairing of any kind of social response that wasn’t either threats of a formal legal separation from my husband or subtle nostalgia from mothers of former Axe users, I decided to trot out the stuff at the last night of Slate’s annual retreat in September. Having sprayed it liberally all over my body on the night of the big promlike party, I watched my roommate—Slate’s Dear Prudie—actually flatten herself up against a hotel room wall and slide uneasily down the hallway, in the manner of that poor cat being chased by PepĂ© Le Pew. Almost immediately upon my arrival at the festivities I was accosted by three female Slate colleagues who spontaneously observed that I smelled completely amazing. I was briefly thrilled at the enthusiastic response, until I realized that I didn’t really want my someday teenaged sons to ever be quite that amazing-smelling to women in their 30s and 40s. One colleague said it brought her right back to whatever it is that happened in the back of a truck when she was herself 14. The silence was slightly less awkward than after the pants-spraying story the week before.










And even the unfailingly gracious John Dickerson—who has chronicled his own Axe-related demons—simply refused to confront me with how bad I smelled, even when I so aggressively violated his personal space that I could have been repurposed as an HR training film. Truth be told, it was Slate’s own Gentleman Scholar, Troy Patterson, who tactfully advised me to go back upstairs and apply a good deal more “scent”—his word—if I really wanted to get someone to react. And so I reapplied three times, the way a junior on the rugby team might. And then, we danced. I smelt it, I dealt it. And it was good.










The truth is, my experiment in smelling like an adolescent male for a week had only two really profound consequences. One, I really did grow to love the fragrance. And no. I don’t want to talk about it. But two, and distinctly more important, both my kids were so embarrassed that they stopped using it within days of my initiating the experiment. Smell you later, Axe. It turns out that there is some Freudian window in which smelling like your mom is so beyond contemplating that they wordlessly gave it up altogether. Indeed, they have both moved quite deliberately backward to the Suave Baby Shampoo, which is precisely where I would like them to stay, at least for a while. And thus, drenched in the smell of rusting metal, we all take two steps away from the Axe years, the entitled years, the boom-chicka-wah-wah years, that are bearing down upon us too quickly.








Source: http://www.slate.com/articles/double_x/doublex/2013/10/axe_men_s_body_spray_what_happens_when_a_woman_wears_it_for_a_week.html
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Endorsement watch: For Christie (Offthekuff)

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Avicii, M.I.A. and Tyler the Creator to Perform at YouTube Music Awards

[unable to retrieve full-text content]
Comedian/musician Reggie Watts will co-host the Nov. 3 event with Jason Schwartzman; nominees include One Direction, Justin Bieber and Lady Gaga.

read more


    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheHollywoodReporter-Technology/~3/6G1I75RKJuM/story01.htm
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Monday, October 21, 2013

Netflix's 3Q Earnings Quadruple, Top Street Views


LOS GATOS, Calif. (AP) — Netflix's earnings quadrupled as its line-up of original programming helped the Internet video subscription service attract 1.3 million more U.S. subscribers during its latest quarter.


The third-quarter results announced Monday are the latest evidence of Netflix's increasing popularity. The Los Gatos, Calif. company ended September with 31 million U.S. subscribers, eclipsing the estimated 29 million subscribers that HBO's 41-year-old pay-TV channel is believed to have.


The quarter covered a three-month stretch ending in September that featured the debut of two series that could only be seen on Netflix.


Netflix earned $32 million, or 52 cents per share, in the quarter. That compared with income of $7.7 million, or 13 cents per share, at the same time last year.


Revenue rose 22 percent from last year to $1.1 billion.


Source: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=239268720&ft=1&f=
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Facebook's Referrals To Media Sites Up 170% YOY, New “Stories To Share” Tells Pages What To Post


Facebook wants to get more news content in its feed by proving to media sites it’s their premier social ally. Today it announced referral traffic to media sites is up an average of 170% this year. It also launched the “Stories To Share” tool, which aims to drive even more traffic by suggesting which articles media sites should post to their Pages but haven’t yet.


There are plenty of places for media sites to share on the web, and Facebook wants to prove that it’s the place they should go first…and most frequently.


In a statistics dump this morning, it cites that a SimpleReach study that says 62% of referral traffic to media sites from social networks comes from Facebook. It didn’t share any absolute traffic numbers, but notes that this year TIME’s referral traffic from Facebook is up 208%, BuzzFeed is up 855% and Bleacher Report is up 1,081%. But it found that sites could get even more referral traffic by posting more often to their Page. A study with 29 sites over seven days found that posting to the News Feed 57% more often caused an 80% increase in referral traffic.


More content posted to Facebook also helps…Facebook. It monetizes by showing ads around compelling content in the feed from users and publishers. While Facebook typically claims its product changes aren’t about earning more revenue, this time it admitted the benefit to monetization.


“When, people find Facebook more engaging, people spend more time on Facebook and see more ads, so one of our goals is to get people to use Facebook more,” Facebook’s head of platform Justin Osofsky tells me. ”It’s important to make Facebook more engaging first and foremost because it creates a great user experience, but that also help our business.”


Stories To Share


Screen shot 2013-10-21 at 11.15.15 AMSo to get publishers to post more content to the News Feed through their Pages, today it’s launching “Stories To Share” on the admin panel of Pages for media sites and publishers. The little box looks at what links to a Page’s site are being shared most frequently by users and getting the most in engagement, but haven’t been posted by the Page yet. With a quick click, admins can compose and share a story for that link.


We’re seeing about a half dozen Stories To Share listed on TechCrunch’s Page. The feature defaults to tell admins what’s hot from the last day, but they can filter to show which of their posts are trending in the last three hours or two days.


The Traffic For Content Exchange


The move comes as part of Facebook’s multi-pronged push to tell media sites “if you scratch our back, we’ll scratch yours.” It now lets media publishers embed posts to spice up their articles — and show the world Facebook is a real-time news source, too. It’s providing APIs to web publishers and TV outlets that show who is talking about what most frequently to lend data to their posts and broadcasts — and get wide, mainstream exposure for Facebook as a place to talk about current events. And it allows Pages to promote their posts so they’re seen by more of their fans — by paying Faebook for Promoted Post ads


Facebook can’t survive without great content that pulls people back to the feed. Luckily it has a massive traffic carrot it can use to tempt media sites to publish to it and talk about it.



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/0jMXqgSI9f4/
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Dell's Project Ophelia Android stick shows up at the FCC as Wyse Cloud Connect

The summer passed without signs of Dell's Project Ophelia Android stick, but it at last appears to be getting close. The thin client has just surfaced at the FCC branded as the (now expected) Wyse Cloud Connect. While there's no mention of software in the filing, the hardware info reveals an ...


Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/h084R7mvKnU/
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Kristin Cavallari: Akira Fashion Show Flirt

Rounding out her weekend with a stylish evening, Kristin Cavallari hosted the Akira 11th Annual Fall Fashion Show in Chicago on Sunday (October 20).


The former “Laguna Beach” babe dressed to impress as she showed up at the shindig, sporting a flirty black dress with a starched white collar.


And it sounds like Kristin and her husband Jay Cutler are staying busy in the bedroom working on giving their son Camden a little brother or sister.


Cavallari told press, "We're working on it. We're doing all the necessary things to get pregnant. And I would love to have a little girl, but if I had another boy, that would be great too."


Source: http://celebrity-gossip.net/kristin-cavallari/kristin-cavallari-akira-fashion-show-flirt-946669
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What Happened When Piers Morgan Asked Bill O'Reilly to Appear on CNN



Bill O'Reilly didn't give Piers Morgan the time of day -- until he had to. 



That, at least, was the story told by the CNN host when he appeared on Howard Stern's SiriusXM show on Wednesday morning.


Morgan recounted that when he first joined the cable news network, he approached the Fox News personality to appear on his talk show. The O'Reilly Factor host apparently didn't show a flicker of recognition for Morgan and quickly declined the offer.


STORY: Piers Morgan Talks Gun Control and Jeff Zucker 


"I've just joined CNN, you may have seen the promos? Nothing," Morgan remembered of the incident, later adding: "What a dick."


But then Morgan said that shortly after the conversation, O'Reilly approached him. The Fox News host asked if his daughter and her friend could take a picture with him because she was a fan of America's Got Talent, which the CNN personality previously hosted.


O'Reilly was "simmering with volcanic lava" at the time, Morgan said. 


The CNN host appeared on Stern's radio program during the press tour for his new book, Shooting Straight


In his book, Morgan notes that he similarly invited News Corp chairman Rupert Murdoch to appear on his show. He was told there would be a "zero in a hundred" chance of that happening. 




Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/live_feed/~3/_-spqWrp2So/story01.htm
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Ranchers Worry As Demand For Sheep Declines




Audio for this story from Morning Edition will be available at approximately 9:00 a.m. ET.



 



Over the last 20 years, the number of sheep in the U.S. has been cut in half. Today, the domestic sheep herd is one-tenth the size it was during World War II. Consumers are eating less lamb and using less wool these days. Those trends have left ranchers to wonder: When are we going to hit bottom?


Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/10/21/238899518/ranchers-worry-as-demand-for-sheep-declines?ft=1&f=3
Category: furlough   Cecily Strong   Victoria Duval   VMA 2013   Rosy Esparza  

From England, one man feeds Western media on Syria

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 billows amid buildings at a bomb explosion in Daraya, a countryside of Damscus, Syria, Tuesday, Oct. 15, 2013. Syrian warplanes bombed several rebel-held areas Tuesday and opposition fighters fired mortar rounds and homemade rockets at Damascus on the first day of a major Muslim holiday, activists said. (AP Photo/Shaam News Network via AP Video)







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 billows amid buildings at a bomb explosion in Daraya, a countryside of Damscus, Syria, Tuesday, Oct. 15, 2013. Syrian warplanes bombed several rebel-held areas Tuesday and opposition fighters fired mortar rounds and homemade rockets at Damascus on the first day of a major Muslim holiday, activists said. (AP Photo/Shaam News Network via AP Video)







(AP) — He's practically a one man band, but Rami Abdurrahman's influence extends far beyond his modest home in this small English city.

The bald, bespectacled 42-year-old operates the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights from his house in the cathedral city of Coventry — and a review of recent media coverage suggests its running tally of killings and clashes is the most frequently cited individual source of information on Syria's civil war for the world's leading news organizations.

"He's just everywhere," said Joshua Landis, the director of the Center for Middle East Studies at the University of Oklahoma. "He's the go-to guy for figures. ... I can't think of anybody who comes close."

Abdurrahman, who says he makes his living from a local clothing shop, says the Observatory relies on four unnamed activists in Syria and a wider network of monitors across the country to document and verify clashes and killings. But as the Observatory has increasingly found itself at the center of Western reporting on Syria's civil, some say his figures — and his sources — need more scrutiny.

Opponents say Abdurrahman is in cahoots with the opposition forces bankrolled by Gulf Arab states, skewing casualty figures to keep the spotlight off rebel atrocities. Others contend that Abdurrahman is in league with the Syrian regime. They accuse him of overplaying incidents of sectarian violence to blacken the reputation of those trying to topple President Bashar Assad.

Abdurrahman sees the competing allegations as evidence that's he's being fair; "You know you're doing a good job when all the sides start to attack you," he said in a recent interview.

Still, one prominent critic says it boggles the mind that a man living in Coventry is somehow able to count and categorize the dead in Syria hour by hour, every day of the week.

"Something is going on which is quite fishy," said As'ad AbuKhalil, a professor of Middle Eastern politics at California State University Stanislaus.

BUSY MAN

Abdurrahman was working on four hours' sleep when he met The Associated Press at Coventry's drab-looking train station earlier this month.

He'd planned to get to bed by 10 p.m. the previous night, but rebel infighting in the Syrian border town of Azaz meant he stayed up until 2 a.m. monitoring developments. He got up again at 6 a.m. to check for overnight updates.

"It's not a nine-to-five job," Rami said as he drove across the city, a white dove-shaped air freshener dangling from his rear-view mirror.

By his own account, Abdurrahman operates as a kind of human switchboard, fielding calls round-the-clock from Syrian activists, international journalists, and human rights workers. Particularly intense news days had seen up to 500 calls, he said.

Suspicions have long dogged Abdurrahman. Is the self-exiled Syrian really who he says he is? Who's behind his organization? And is he accurate enough to justify the world's reliance on his reporting?

Switching from English to Arabic and often speaking through a translator, Abdurrahman — whose real name is Ossama Suleiman — defended his decision to use a pseudonym as part of the Arab tradition of the nom de guerre.

He said he received money from a European human rights group, but declined to name it. Only after prodding did he say he had been receiving less than 100,000 euros ($137,000) a year since 2012 in support of his work.

"We're in a state of war," he said. "It's difficult to be completely transparent."

SYRIAN NETWORK

Abdurrahman, born in the Syrian city of Banias, says government harassment of his family first sparked his interest in human rights work. He left for Britain in 2000, moving to Coventry, about 100 miles (160 kilometers) northwest of London, where the revenue from the clothes shop helps support him, his wife, and their young child.

He launched the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights in May of 2006, saying the activists he met while in Syria formed the group's core.

Counting the words out with his hand, Abdurrahman said his modus operandi was: "Document, verify, and publish."

That methodology has been put to the test in Syria, where both sides stand accused of peddling misinformation. Abdurrahman said his work was like navigating a "sea of lies."

Abdurrahman boasts 230-odd informants on the ground, ranging from Syrian journalists who leak him stories on the sly to employees of military hospitals who fill him in on army casualties. He said he sticks to the journalistic gold standard of only accepting a story once it had been confirmed by a second source.

He claims to have rarely gotten it wrong, saying he could think of only two cases in which he overstated casualty figures. Other mistakes, such as confusing a car bombing with a mortar strike, were more common, but in every case he insisted errors were corrected.

"We're human, we make mistakes," he said. "But it's our intention not to repeat them."

A LEADING NEWS SOURCE

Abdurrahman's accuracy matters because so many news organizations use his reporting. A review of stories published by three major newswires, including The Associated Press, over the past year show he's cited more often than SANA, Syria's government-run news agency.

Experts attribute the exposure to Abdurrahman's non-stop publication schedule, and the fact that so many observers are barred from Syria and that others are at risk of kidnapping or worse. That means journalists, human rights groups, and even the United Nations — which put out its own death toll at more than 100,000 back in July — have to rely at least in part on his figures.

That level of prominence worries those who harbor doubts about his organization.

"Let's assume good faith," said Nadim Shehadi, with London's Chatham House think tank. "Let's assume he's genuine, and qualified, and everything. He relies on too many sources to be able to check."

The problem with checking what's going on in Syria is that few people can gain access to the areas involved, said human rights researcher Cilina Nasser, who has collaborated with Abdurrahman in compiling casualty figures on several mass killings.

Nasser, who works for London-based Amnesty International, described Abdurrahman as careful and "usually accurate."

Her opinion was largely seconded by Lama Fakih, a researcher with New York-based Human Rights Watch.

"In broad strokes, the reporting is solid," she said.

Nasser said it was important to keep in mind that everyone — from Abdurrahman to the journalists charged with following up on his figures — labors under the same handicap.

"There's always something missing," she said, "which is us being on the ground."

___

Online:

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights English-language website: http://syriahr.com/en/

___

Raphael Satter can be reached at: http://raphae.li/twitter

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-10-20-Britain-Syria's%20Scorekeeper/id-5218ece0d0bc48aaa4da43dba8bfee1e
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Sunday, October 20, 2013

Graham Admits Republicans Went Too Far (Taegan Goddard's Political Wire)

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Jason Collins: Out And Still Unemployed

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Jason Collins was non-descript center playing out the string of the end of a non-descript NBA career. That changed a few months ago when Collins became the first athlete from a major North American sports league to go public with his homosexuality. Now, just a couple of weeks before the start of a new NBA season, Collins remains unsigned. Sportswriter Stefan Fatsis talks to Robert Siegel to explore some of the reasons why.Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/NprProgramsATC/~3/S1q9dzgOKRo/story.php
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Rethinking The Seductiveness Of Mobile-First


Editor’s Note: Semil Shah works on product for Swell, is a TechCrunch columnist, and an investor. He blogs at Haywire, and you can follow him on Twitter at @semil.


For the past few months, my weekly column here has been focused on some aspect of “mobile.” There’s no denying the scope of the platform shift, user volume, and consumer attention. Yet, for startups, being “mobile-first” in today’s market is a dicey proposition given the harsh realities of distribution and the fact consumers are bombarded with too many indistinguishable choices. Taken together, it begs the question: “For new startups today, is mobile-first the right choice?”


In this post, I’ll share some conditions under which being mobile-first today either isn’t necessary or puts a new startup at a disadvantage. The idea here is to play the devil’s advocate for a day, to gently push back against the strong mobile tailwinds and reexamine some reasons why new startups can or should begin their work on the web, even if they end up with a mobile presence eventually. With that spirit in mind, and in no particular order, here’s what I came up with:


Some markets make mobile-first simply unnecessary or unviable. Consider products aimed at people in large corporations who work on desktops or laptops all day long. Yes, this segment is not growing as fast as mobile is, but then again, nothing is growing as fast as mobile. Specifically, products targeting users in larger enterprises, or where security in information technology (especially in mobile) is a concern, or where the user is required to create content through heavy input (like writing or number-crunching) provide examples where mobile-first just doesn’t work. Applications and solutions targeted at these types of customers are likely better off to start web-first and then grow from this point of origin.


Relatively speaking, easier to recruit web developers versus mobile developers. The market for experienced, quality iOS and Android developers and designers is extremely tight. If and when these folks do their next thing, it will likely be as a founder or close to formation of a new company. In the absence of a mobile developer on the team, focusing on the web can make it slightly easier to find and recruit engineers.


Faster cycles for iterations, testing, and moving toward product-market fit. With the team of web engineers ready to go, building for the web, relative to mobile, is a more sane path in many regards. Onboarding, an area where many mobile users drop out of the funnel, can be easier on the web, which impacts retention through emails captured at sign-in. Initial features can be layered in as the stack is built on the back-end, and the team and users can run more precise tests to see what does and doesn’t work. As we all know on mobile, this level of freedom in development is virtually unattainable, as cycles for development, user testing, and feedback loops are considerably longer, and therefore more expensive.


The web provides a strong foundation to build a brand and harness virality. If a web team is fortunate enough to pick up some traction and move closer to that elusive goal of product-market fit, being on the web confers some advantages over mobile. First, web users are often logged into other sites with their data or graph information, which makes sharing and inviting a bit easier. More people using the product on the web also increases the likelihood that more people will be exposed to the brand and learn to identify what it is. This type of awareness can be invaluable when it comes time to extend a presence to mobile, because those audiences can be encouraged over time to download a mobile app rather than discovering it through random channels.


Mobile can be thought of as an extension, not the foundation. When it comes time for a website or web software product to extend its reach into mobile, it can drive current users to its application with a more direct message and call to action. To do this, of course, the team will need mobile engineers and designers who can not only work with the current team, but can articulate a vision for how users on mobile interact with the service. The hope is, by this point, a team is ready to extend and can show some evidence of success, some money in their bank account, and some demand from users to provide a mobile touchpoint.


There are many more reasons why new companies should seriously think twice about mobile-first. Perhaps a more reasonable way is “mobile-eventually.” Of course, there are some products and services which are truly, inherently mobile in nature — like Uber — that need to either start on mobile or extend rapidly after quick web testing. But for the majority of mobile applications continuously flooding the market as consumers drown in a sea of choices, going “mobile-first” has been and remains a seductive, risky approach. There will always be a few elite teams who architect larger systems on more than one platform from the beginning, and those folks either have the money and/or experience to play a longer game. This luxury isn’t distributed widely. Instead, the majority of teams are faced with more fundamental, existential questions, and while mobile is “shiny” today and will be for a very long time, getting to the handset doesn’t necessarily mean one has to start there.



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/rynwCUdQl5A/
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John Hartford On Mountain Stage


The importance of John Hartford's musical influence is difficult to overstate: His presence is felt in the various styles that have grown out of traditional Appalachian, country and bluegrass music, and can be found threaded through the works of contemporary artists like BĂ©la Fleck and The Avett Brothers.


Before his death in 2001, Hartford embraced and performed traditional tunes while simultaneously writing new songs that sounded old. He also wrote unusual hybrid songs — including one of the most popular hits of its time, "Gentle On My Mind," a two-time Grammy winner.


John Hartford was joined in this 1989 Mountain Stage set by his son Jamie on mandolin and vocals, and by upright bass player Mark Schatz. In addition to playing fiddle and banjo, Hartford sang and provided percussion with his feet. Host Larry Groce said of Hartford, "He had one foot rooted in the past, and the other always at least a few steps into the future. And both were dancing."


Set List

  • "Waynesboro Reel"

  • "I Know You Don't Love Me Anymore"

  • "A New Love"

  • "Run Little Rabbit Run"

  • "Gum Tree Canoe"

  • "Your Long Journey"

Source: http://www.npr.org/event/music/234748733/john-hartford-on-mountain-stage?ft=1&f=1039
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UFC 166 predictions


There's no doubt about it: the UFC has assembled one hell of a fight card for this coming Saturday night. One of the most important UFC heavyweight title fights of all time will take place, top international prospects will make their UFC debuts, top contenders will compete in bouts of significance and much more.


Can Cain Velasquez repeat against Junior dos Santos? Will Gilbert Melendez blow past Diego Sanchez? Can Roy Nelson derail Daniel Cormier's plans? I answer these questions and more for Saturday night's fights.


What: UFC 166: Velasquez vs. dos Santos 3


Where: Toyota Center, Houston, Texas


When: Saturday, the four-fight Facebook card starts at 6 p.m. ET, the four-fight Fox Sports 1 card starts at 8 p.m. and the five-fight main card starts on pay-per-view at 10 p.m.


Cain Velasquez vs. Junior dos Santos


Part of me hopes the Brazilian can win here if only to secure a future where the top two heavyweights in MMA face each other again and again. Alas, I don't think that's going to happen. The difference between Cain vs. JDS 1 and 2 is that the second fight is more instructive. A five-round fight, almost without exception, tells you more about both fighters than a first-round KO. In fact, JDS' win over Velasquez doesn't tell us anything we didn't already know: he can knock out anyone in MMA. But if he can't rely on the big punch, what else can he do? I do expect him to make some adjustments to slow down Velasquez, namely, by being offensive in all phases of the game. Even if he doesn't plan to do much on the ground with the champion, it's better to execute a takedown than spending the round waiting to land a big punch as you defend takedown after punch after takedown.


In the end, it seems to me the second fight taught us how these two match up more than the first. Unless JDS can turn a tactical corner big enough to make up the major distance needed to make this competitive, expect a repeat performance.


Pick: Velasquez


Daniel Cormier vs. Roy Nelson


Everyone loves this fight and I'm one of them, but I don't see it as particularly competitive. Nelson has a bigger punch, but short of that in MMA contexts, I'm not convinced he can do anything better than Cormier. More importantly, Nelson is a guy who (yes, while sick) was outwrestled by Frank Mir. If Mir can do it, there's absolutely no reason to think Cormier can't. And as a result, unless Nelson lands a haymaker on the speedier Cormier, I don't see any path to victory.


Pick: Cormier


Gilbert Melendez vs. Diego Sanchez


Sanchez is going to press forward here like he always does, but skills win fight and Melendez is better in every dimension of the game at this point. I don't know if Melendez will be able to finish Sanchez, but if he does, that sends quite a message and could put him right back into title hunt sweepstakes.


Pick: Melendez


Gabriel Gonzaga vs. Shawn Jordan


The oddsmakers favor Jordan and I think that's defensible. Gonzaga might be able to make things interesting with a lucky shot or if he can take things to the floor, but Jordan is a load. The guy is a monster puncher, extremely strong, has ever-improving takedown defense and is an incredibly underrated athlete. I don't have a clear sense of how this fight will go, but I am mostly certain Jordan is the fresher of the two and that might be enough.


Pick: Jordan


John Dodson vs. Darrell Montague


Montague is a very good acquisition to the UFC's flyweight roster. He's amassed about as good a record as one can battling on the regional scene and like all flyweights, is well rounded and proactive everywhere. The difference here is a) Dodson's punching power and b) his growth experience against more elite flyweights. Dodson is a much better version of himself even after and especially due to losing to Demetrious Johnson. I certainly expect Montague to keep it competitive, but that's about it.


Pick: Dodson


From the preliminary card:


Tim Boetsch > C.B. Dollaway
Nate Marquardt < Hector Lombard
Sarah Kaufman > Jessica Eye
George Sotiropolos > K.J. Noons
T.J. Waldburger < Adlan Amagov
Tony Ferguson > Mike Rio
Jeremy Larsen < Andre Fili
Dustin Pague < Kyoji Horogucki


Source: http://www.mmafighting.com/2013/10/16/4844364/ufc-166-predictions-velasquez-dos-santos-3-mma-news
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UFC 166 weigh-in photos


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Source: http://www.mmafighting.com/2013/10/18/4853920/ufc-166-weigh-in-photos
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2 girls arrested in Florida bullying case

WINTER HAVEN, Fla. (AP) — Two Florida girls who were primarily responsible for bullying a 12-year-old girl who killed herself were arrested after one of them acknowledged the harassment online, a sheriff said Tuesday.


Police in central Florida have been investigating the death of 12-year-old Rebecca Sedwick, who climbed a tower at an abandoned concrete plant Sept. 9 and hurled herself to her death. Authorities said as many as 15 girls may have bullied Rebecca and the investigation was continuing.


Polk County Sheriff Grady Judd said the arrests of the girls, ages 14 and 12, were hastened when the older girl posted Saturday on Facebook, saying she bullied Rebecca but she didn't care.


"We decided that we can't leave her out there. Who else is she going to torment, who else is she going to harass?" Judd said.


The 14-year-old girl was accused of threatening to beat up Rebecca while they were sixth-graders at Crystal Lake Middle School, telling her "to drink bleach and die" and saying she should kill herself, the sheriff said. The older girl convinced the younger girl to bully Rebecca, and they both repeatedly intimidated her, called her names and once the younger girl even beat Rebecca up, police said.


Both girls were charged as juveniles with third-degree felony aggravated stalking. If convicted, it's not clear how much time, if any at all, the girls would spend in juvenile detention because they did not have any previous criminal history, the sheriff said.


"Time may not be the best trainer here. We've got the change this behavior of these children," Judd said.


The sheriff's office identified the two girls, but The Associated Press generally does not name juveniles charged with crimes.


Judd said the bullying began after the 14-year-old girl started dating a boy Rebecca had been seeing. The older girl didn't like that and "began to harass and ultimately torment Rebecca," Judd said.


A man who answered the phone at the 14-year-old's Lakeland home said he was her father and told The Associated Press "none of it's true."


"My daughter's a good girl and I'm 100 percent sure that whatever they're saying about my daughter is not true," he said.


At the mobile home, a barking pit bull stood guard and no one came outside despite shouts from reporters for an interview.


Neighbor George Colom said he had never interacted personally with girl but noticed her playing roughly with other children on the street.


"Kids getting beat up, kids crying," Colom said. "The kids hang loose unsupervised all the time."


A telephone message left at the 12-year-old girl's home was not immediately returned and no one answered the door to her home.


The girls were arrested Monday night and released to their parents' custody. Judd said the 14-year-old was "very cold, had no emotion at all upon her arrest."


The girls remain on home detention.


The younger girl was Rebecca's former best friend, but the sheriff said the older girl turned her and others against Rebecca, out of fear they would be bullied, too.


Before her death, Rebecca changed one of her online screen names to "That Dead Girl" and she messaged a boy in North Carolina: "I'm jumping." Detectives found some of her diaries at her home, and she talked of how depressed she was about the situation.


Last December, Rebecca was hospitalized for three days after cutting her wrists because of what she said was bullying, according to the sheriff. Later, after Rebecca complained that she had been pushed in the hallway and that another girl wanted to fight her, Rebecca's mother began home-schooling her in Lakeland, a city of about 100,000 midway between Tampa and Orlando, Judd said.


This fall, Rebecca started at a new school, Lawton Chiles Middle Academy, but the bullying continued online, authorities said.


Judd said he was upset the girls who were arrested still had access to social networks, even after Rebecca's suicide.


"If we can find any charges we can bring against their parents, we will," Judd said.


___


Kay reported from Miami.


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/2-girls-arrested-florida-bullying-case-164108414.html
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Saturday, October 19, 2013

Tal National: The Rock Stars Of West Africa





Kaani is Tal National's third studio album.



Courtesy of the artist


Kaani is Tal National's third studio album.


Courtesy of the artist


Tal National is the most popular live act in the West African nation of Niger, and the band is ready to go global. Its third album, Kaani, is the first to get an international release, and it arrives just in time for the group's first U.S. tour.


The first thing that hits you when you listen to Tal National is the band's tightness and fiery energy; its guitar and percussion-driven grooves are bursting with exuberance.



The song "Wongharey" praises the fighters of Niger's history and thanks God that the country is at peace today. It is, but given the political tensions unfolding in West Africa these days, that peace is fragile. So it means a lot that Tal National includes members from all of Niger's major ethnic groups and creates songs in a variety of languages that celebrate the lives of their countrymen.


With a large, rotating lineup of multi-instrumentalists, this band is beloved in Niger for its epic live performances. The band's sound features shredding electric guitars, but it in no way mimics Western rock. The guitar tone is sharp and stinging, but the rhythms and melodies are rooted in local traditions; this really is African rock.


Tal National's leader, who goes by the name Almeida, has a somewhat surprising day job — he's been a judge for 20 years. Now, you might not want to have your case appear before a guy who plays five-hour concerts five nights a week, but based on this band's wisdom and openhearted vision for a peaceful, multiethnic Niger, I think I might just take that chance.


Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/10/17/236229506/tal-national-the-rock-stars-of-west-africa?ft=1&f=1039
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Johnny Depp Makes Surprise Appearance at BFI London Film Fest Awards Ceremony


Johnny Depp was a surprise guest Saturday night, appearing on stage to much applause to hand Christopher Lee his award. "It's my great honor to be here," he said, calling Lee "a great man, a very great man indeed."



Lee has been "a wonderful inspiration" for him and many other actors and filmmakers, Depp said.


"It was certainly a childhood dream come true" to work with and learn from Lee, Depp added. He went on to laud Lee as "a true gentleman," "a national treasure" and "a true artist."


STORY: Pawel Pawlikowski's 'Ida' Wins BFI London Film Festival Top Prize 


"I love you," Depp said in finishing.


After a long standing ovation, Lee said on stage: "Johnny, I don't know what to say. I didn't know you were going to be here. It is a very emotional moment for me as you can probably hear."


Someone had told Lee that Depp was making a film "somewhere else in Europe" right now, the veteran actor explained.


Lee said Depp "means an enormous amount to me." And he lauded Depp for being one of the few younger actors "who is a true star." He also called him an actor's and director's dream to work with.


Describing his emotions at big celebrations like this, Lee said: "Tearful, no. Fearful, on occasion."


And he quoted someone who had once told him people should try everything -- except for incest and folk dancing.


"I can prove I am not guilty of either one," Lee quipped, highlighting that he has been married for 52 years. He added: "Folk dancing, I don't think that's for me."


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/international/~3/V-m7xsnaPlI/story01.htm
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Hey, Why Did You Floor It? Tracking Junior Behind The Wheel





Alyson Illich used technologies that tracked her son Colter's location while he was driving. "I think it made him more thoughtful," she said.



Family photo


Alyson Illich used technologies that tracked her son Colter's location while he was driving. "I think it made him more thoughtful," she said.


Family photo


Nowhere is the temptation to use technology to monitor a child greater than when that child is learning to drive.


Auto accidents are still the leading cause of death among teens in the U.S. And while fatalities are dropping, giving a teen the keys to a car is still one of the most terrifying things most parents ever do.


Parents today are raising digital natives. Many toddlers are as likely to amuse themselves with a touch screen as a set of blocks. Texts, mobile phones, video games and gadgets have surrounded teens their entire lives.


Today's parents may not have grown up in a tech-saturated world, but almost every day new technologies come to market that give them more options when it comes to keeping tabs on their kids.



Read About Teen Driver Safety


Teen Driver Source



Giancarlo Daniele is a 22-year-old Stanford grad and the founder of Drive Pulse. He makes a little black dongle, not much bigger than a flash drive, that can plug into a car.


Daniele realized that every modern car has something called an onboard diagnostic port. "It turns out that that port is incredibly powerful; [it] connects to your car's brain ...," he said.


Parents have been using technology to track teenage drivers for years, but Daniele believes that by tapping into a car's onboard computers the amount of detailed information they can track about their teens could explode.


Daniele's gadget also has GPS to track location and it connects to the Internet. Then it feeds all this information to an app parents can use to keep tabs on their teens.


A few weeks ago, he snapped one of the dongles into my car and we set it up to send alerts to my mobile phone when certain things happened in the car.





The Drive Pulse app shows details of driving data for NPR's Steve Henn.



Drive Pulse


The Drive Pulse app shows details of driving data for NPR's Steve Henn.


Drive Pulse


All of a sudden I was getting notifications if I slammed on the brakes or floored the accelerator. Drive Pulse caught me going almost 80 miles an hour on my way into San Francisco.


I would get texts when the car was turned on or off, complete with maps showing my location. You could even set the app to send a notification if the car was idling.


What's wrong with that?


"Polluting the atmosphere," Daniele said. "Basically, idling is a bad thing."


And if you live in a cold climate and your kid is making out in the car somewhere you will know. You'll even get a text letting you know where to find your child.


"Another feature that's very possible and we are so close to implementing is geo-fencing," Daniele said. That would allow a parent to be notified when their child enters a designated geographic area — for example, a boyfriend's house or a bad neighborhood, Daniele said.


So if my daughter were dating someone I really don't like, I could geo-fence this person's house and get a text if she was parked out front.


Not surprisingly, lots of kids think that's creepy. Daniele said his company has struggled with the creep factor. "We are young, too. We are trying to figure out what the right balance is," he said.


When Daniele and his team were developing Drive Pulse they weren't sure if they should include location, but the parents they spoke to demanded it.


"That's what they were willing to pay for," he said.


Kate Reardon is a 20-year-old junior at Kenyon College. Over the summer her mother, Amy, brought home one of the Drive Pulse dongles to test. Kate has two younger brothers, one in college and another who is 16 and just started driving.


"I actually thought that that was a really weird thing to want to put in a car," Kate said. "I think it just makes this antagonistic relationship between your parents and you. And it's really not probably super-healthy for anyone. It reduces communication to someone stalking the other and I don't think anybody really likes that."





Kate Reardon's mother, Amy, tested a device that tracked her children's driving. Kate, a college junior, says she found it to be "a really weird thing to want to put in a car."



Family photo


Kate Reardon's mother, Amy, tested a device that tracked her children's driving. Kate, a college junior, says she found it to be "a really weird thing to want to put in a car."


Family photo


Amy Reardon says she was just interested in helping Kate's brother Jack — who just got a license —practice and get better at driving. Amy Reardon wanted the data Drive Pulse could offer.


After a fairly charged conversation with her kids, Amy Reardon gave the device back.


But thousands of parents are embracing these kinds of technologies.


Alyson Illich used technologies that tracked the location of her car and her kids for years.


"We told them that these are our cars, they are our assets and we want to know where they are," she said.


At the time, the Illich family was living in Houston and there was a municipal curfew.


"A couple times when my son Colter was running late he would call me and tell me he was on the way," Alyson Illich said. "He knew if he didn't I would be woken up by a text that told me he was still out. So I think it made him more thoughtful."


Today Colter is a sophomore at Stanford and while he says he understood why his parents used technology to keep tabs on him, he now admits he had his own ways of slipping the electronic leash.


"If we wanted to go out later, I'd tell my friends and we'd just drop off my car at my house," he said.


Dr. Flaura Winston studies injury prevention and teen driving at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. She says often parents use technology that monitors kids' driving to keep tabs on other issues. And that is not always helpful.


"I absolutely do think that monitoring technology can be helpful if it's used in the right way," Winston said. "I just don't want parents to think that they have to go out and buy these devices when in fact there's a lot they can do even without them."



Winston says being directly involved in teaching a kid to drive while nurturing a good relationship might be the best thing a parent can do to keep a new driver safe.


"Teens who say their parents not only set rules and monitor their driving but are also very supportive are half as likely to be in a crash," she said. "[They are] 71 percent less likely to drive intoxicated than teens with uninvolved parents. They're also 30 percent less likely to use cellphones [while driving]."


Winston says technology that monitors a young driver can play a positive role in helping a teen safely progress toward independence on the road.


But if as a parent you are tempted to use technology to try to keep tabs on a wild child, be careful — you could just end up starting more fights and creating more problems than you solve.


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/alltechconsidered/2013/10/14/234078630/hey-why-did-you-floor-it-tracking-junior-behind-the-wheel?ft=1&f=1019
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