Monday, July 29, 2013

Apple Distributing Free iBooks to Employees Ahead of Mavericks and iOS 7 Launch

iBooks.pngDuring quarterly retail meetings that took place today, Apple announced a new ?iBooks Discovery? initiative that will see Apple Store employees provided with free iBooks beginning next week in order to prepare the retail workers for the launch of OS X Mavericks and iOS 7, reports 9to5Mac.

While an iBooks app has been available on iOS devices since the debut of the original iPad in 2010, OS X Mavericks will mark the first instance of an iBooks app for the Mac.

The Mavericks version of iBooks offers a number of features that will appeal to readers and students alike, including full screen reading capabilities, note taking functionality, and a feature that allows study cards to be automatically created from notes.

With access to free ebooks, Apple Store employees will be able to familiarize themselves with both the iBookstore and the many features that iBooks offers, allowing the employees to answer customer questions and promote the apps and the new operating systems.

Apple has also provided some of its employees with beta access to OS X Mavericks and recently, it sent out a memo asking its retail workers for innovative ideas on how to improve the iPhone, the retail store environment, and sales techniques.

At a retail summit that took place in early July, Tim Cook announced plans to improve the in-store sales of iPhones, which are considered a ?gateway product? to other Apple devices. As part of its push for greater sales, Apple has launched a new iPhone Back to School promotion and has plans for an in-store trade-in program for older devices.

The company also plans to heavily market both iOS 7 and OS X Mavericks, which are expected to be released to the public this fall.

Source: http://www.macrumors.com/2013/07/28/apple-distributing-free-ibooks-to-employees-ahead-of-mavericks-and-ios-7-launch/

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Sunday, July 28, 2013

Washington, D.C. weather forecast: slow moving cold front to bring t-Storms

A cold front will bring unsettled weather to the mid-Atlantic late Saturday and into Sunday.

Overnight:
Mainly Clear and Comfortable
Lows: 60s
Wind: S 2-5 mph
Saturday:
Partly Cloudy, T-Showers (30%)
Highs: 82?-87?
Wind: South 3-8 mph
Sunday:
Showers and T-Storms (60%)
Highs: lower 80s
Wind: S 5-10 mph

An approaching cold front will bring increasing cloudiness Saturday along with increased chances for showers and a few thunderstorms by late afternoon and evening. Highs will be in the middle 80s with increased humidity.

As the cold front moves closer on Sunday, showers and thunderstorms will likely become more numerous. Some storms have a? high potential? to become heavy rain makers. By Monday morning, the front will be east of Washington. A new area of high pressure will start building into the region through the middle of next week.

For the latest weather headlines, stay with ABC 7 News, NewsChannel 8 and WJLA.com.

Source: http://www.wjla.com/blogs/weather/2013/07/washington-d-c-weather-forecast-slow-moving-cold-front-to-bring-t-storms-19459.html

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For Sale Algae bundle: chaetomorpha, red kelp, caulerpa - North London

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Source: http://forum.practicalfishkeeping.co.uk/showthread.php?t=100531&goto=newpost

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Tuesday, July 23, 2013

PS Vita Might Measure Your Heart Rate Thanks to a New Technology Developed by Sony

News, PS Vita

by Giuseppe Nelva Jul 23rd 2013 5:49AM

Today the?Game Tools and Middleware Forum 2013?was held in Tokyo and Sony Computer Entertainment Senior Vice President of the Technology Platform Teiji Yutaka held a presentation during which he introduced an interesting technology to monitor the player?s heart rate by using the PS Vita?s camera.

The new and ambitious technology can work in two ways: the first is based on the fact that the color of a person?s face changes slightly depending on his heart rate. The effect is extremely subtle, measuring only 1/100 of a bit in the RGB scale, but a demo has been developed to successfully draw a waveform of the pulse.

The second way is even more clever. Since the front camera of the PS Vita is placed near the buttons on the right, the player can place his finger on top of it and the console can measure his heart rate from the change of light passing through his skin. The variation here is of 2-3 bits, so it?s easier to detect than the other method, but the drawback is that it requires the user to keep his finger on the camera, so the usability is more limited.

Of course the technology is still in its infancy, so it?ll take time for it to be perfected, but at the very least it?ll be possible to detect if the player is in an excited state. An example was brought by mentioning one?s pulse influencing his shots in a golf game.

The tech also works with video footage, so an interesting application mentioned by Yutaka-san could be in association with the video streaming software.

What do you think? Is this tech going somewhere after Nintendo dropped its plans for the Vitality Sensor, while Microsoft is applying something similar with the new Kinect and the Xbox One? Is it going to enrich games, or maybe it?s just a gimmick? I guess we?ll have to wait and see about that.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/DSRSS/~3/KQDwBn1IwPI/

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Monday, July 22, 2013

UF alum McCumber wins Florida Open Championship

Published: Sunday, July 21, 2013 at 11:27 p.m.
Last Modified: Sunday, July 21, 2013 at 11:27 p.m.

Former Florida men's golfer Tyler McCumber scored his first professional victory at the Quail Valley Golf Club and Orchid Island Golf & Beach Club in the Florida Open Championship in Vero Beach on Sunday.

McCumber shot 12-under par (204) to finish atop the 156-man field and claim the 67th Florida Open Championship.

Ending the second round one stroke off of the lead, McCumber shot consistently in round three and made four straight birdies to advance to 5-under on the day and capture the title by two strokes.

McCumber is off to a strong start with his first Florida State Golf Association tournament of the year under his belt.

The Gator alumnus has also participated in two eGolf Professional Tour events this year. He finished tied for 17th (9-under) in the Southern Open in Kannapolis, N.C., on Jul. 10-13 and tied for fourth (even par) in the Mimosa Hills Open in Morganton, N.C., on Jun.19- 21.

The next eGolf Professional Tour event is the River Run Classic in Davidson, N.C., scheduled for Jul. 31- Aug. 2.

Source: http://www.gainesville.com/article/20130721/articles/130729952

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Sunday, July 21, 2013

Lawyer: O'Bannon suit 'threatens college sports'

By Jerry Hinnen | College Football Writer

Mark Emmert's NCAA is under serious legal fire. (USATSI)
Mark Emmert's NCAA is under serious legal fire. (USATSI)
So: Would a victory for the plaintiffs in the Ed O'Bannon lawsuit be a much-needed course correction to finally end the shameful exploitation of the NCAA's highest revenue-producing athletes, or an athletic apocalypse that would see thousands of athletes "going pro in something other than sports" lose their chance at a degree as their scholarship money is funneled to a relative handful of football and men's baketball players?

For now, it depends on which side's lawyer you ask. And if you ask NCAA chief legal counsel Donald Remy, he'll tell you the latter description above isn't an exaggeration.

"College sports today are valued by the student-athletes who compete and all of us who support them," Remy said Friday, per the Associated Press. "However, the plaintiffs' lawyers in the likeness case now want to make this about professionalizing a few current student-athletes to the detriment of all others. Their scheme to pay a small number of student-athletes threatens college sports as we know it.

"In particular, we would lose the very real opportunity for at least 96 percent of NCAA male and female student-athletes who do not compete in Division I men's basketball or FBS football to play a sport and get an education, as they do today."

Remy was responding to the Thursday announcement that six current football players have joined the O'Bannon suit as plaintiffs, fulfilling the presiding judge's requirement before she rules on whether the suit can proceed as a class-action lawsuit against the NCAA.

Decisions against the NCAA in the suit could force its members to split television revenues with players in those revenue-producing sports. But the suit also names EA Sports as a defendant. EA Sports is the videogame company that has allegedly used the likenesses of real-world college athletes (like O'Bannon) without payment -- or payment, that is, for anyone other than the NCAA and its schools.

The NCAA announced this week it would not renew its licensing agreement with EA Sports (though the company's agreement with the Collegiate Licensing Company means the game will continue, perhaps largely unchanged).

"It's apparent to us that the NCAA's decision to end its long and hugely profitable relationship with EA is tied directly to the pressure our litigation is bringing the bear," lead counsel for the O'Bannon plaintiffs Steve Berman said Friday, per the AP. "Our suit illustrates how the cabal between the NCAA and EA has exploited student athletes for years, using their images in video games without compensation. While we are heartened they've stopped the practice, we believe they owe those student-athletes a great deal more than their implied promise to stop stealing their images."

Whichever side college sports fans believe, it seems increasingly clear the court's choice of which side it believes could have major ramifications for the NCAA ... and all the sports it oversees.


Eye on College Football is maintained by the four handsomest men to ever handsome: Tom Fornelli, Jerry Hinnen, Chris Huston, and Chip Patterson. Follow Eye on College Football on Twitter, discover the meaning of life.

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/cbssportsline/cfb_news/~3/ABw626pG4tA/ncaa-attorney-lawsuit-threatens-college-sports-as-we-know-it

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Saturday, July 20, 2013

Lib at Large: Songwriter Bonnie Hayes heading to Boston's Berklee College

  • Lib at Large archive
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  • Dec 30:
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  • Dec 9:
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  • Dec 2:
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FOR THE PAST 15 years, Bonnie Hayes has been living the good life in Marin County. A successful record producer, she owns her home in San Anselmo, has a daughter she's putting through college, plays keyboards with one of the county's most popular bands and enjoys the music business respect she's earned as the songwriter who penned the hits "Love Letter" and "Have a Heart" for Bonnie Raitt.

At 58, she's com-fortable in her own skin. Maybe a little too comfortable.

That's one of the reasons she's renting out her house, packing her stuff and moving to Boston for a prestigious new job as the chairwoman of the songwriting department at the Berklee College of Music, the largest

Courtesy of Bob Hakins Songwriter and musician Bonnie Hayes has been selected as chairwoman of Berklee College of Music's songwriting department.

school of contemporary music in the world.

"It's the year of the snake and I'm shedding my skin," is how she puts this radical change in her life. "I'll be someone else when I come back."

A decade and a half ago, Hayes left Los Angeles and moved to Marin with her then 4-year-old daughter, Lily, now a 19-year-old student who left home a year ago to study at Boston University.

"I moved here for a reason, to have a nice life for my kid," she said the other day after wrapping up work on Tommy Castro's new album. "I've been living a nice suburban lifestyle, but now that my daughter's gone it's too mellow a context for me. I may be nuts, but I really like being scared and surprised and challenged by what I do."

Before she

goes, her Marin fans will have a chance to wish her well on Saturday night, when she plays a "Bye-Bye Bonnie" show at Rancho Nicasio with Mystery Dance, a band she co-leads with bassist Tim Eschliman.

Hayes spent last summer teaching a full load of classes at Berklee, so when a full-time teaching position came up, she applied for it. On a lark, when the chairman of the songwriting department also came open, for the first time in 35 years, she threw her hat in the ring for that job, too, thinking she probably wouldn't get it, but what would it hurt to apply?

So when the call came in May that Berklee wanted her as the new head of the songwriting department, beginning in the fall, she suddenly found herself with a major life decision to make.

"When I got the job, I really had to think if I wanted it," she recalled. "I'm really, happy here, but I had to ask myself, 'Are you happy because you're in Marin County, or are you happy because you know how to be happy.'"

She decided that she might be unhappy if she turned down a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity like this, and would always second-guess herself, wondering, "What if?"

And, besides, this kind of challenge not only fits her self-described OCD personality,

Courtesy of Tom Dellinger Songwriter and musician Bonnie Hayes has been selected as chairwoman of Berklee College of Music's songwriting department.

it offers the kind of personal security, including health insurance and other benefits, that life as a freelance record producer and songwriter doesn't. Plus, she'd be close to her daughter, who will be attending Berklee this year.

"I've been making a living as a record producer, but I could see that I was going to have to ramp it up or it was going to go away," she said. "And I wasn't sure how long this wave I've been riding on is going to last, so I realized I'd better start thinking ahead or it's going to get ahead of me. I always thought I would coast into relaxed obscurity, and here I am ramping up. I'm agape at my own capacity for intensity because this job is topping anything I've done before. But I can't help it. I have to do it."

In her new post, she'll supervise a staff of eight full-time and five part-time teachers, develop the curriculum, monitor its progress and communicate her vision for the future. She'll teach one class, basic lyric writing.

"I don't think teaching is enough for me, but running a department and creating curriculum gives me experience I really need that I can bring back here in 5 or 10 years," she remarked. "I love my community here, but there are world-class musicians, educators and visionaries at Berklee. There is so much going on there. I'm looking forward to playing at that level."

Rancho Nicasio owner Bob Brown, who's known Hayes and her brothers for decades, sees the Berklee post as "a wonderful opportunity."

"Of

Courtesy of Tom Dellinger Songwriter and musician Bonnie Hayes has been selected as chairwoman of Berklee College of Music's songwriting department.

all the artists I've dealt with over the years, she's he most accomplished all around musician. I've never met anybody as well-rounded as she is. Berklee is fortunate to have her."

The eldest of seven children, Hayes attended the Blue Bear School of Music in San Francisco when she was growing up, as did her brothers, Kevin Hayes, former drummer for Robert Cray, and Chris Hayes, lead guitarist and a songwriter for Huey Lewis and the News. Bonnie also has taught songwriting at Blue Bear, including at its summer camp program, and serves on the school's board of trustees.

In the Bay Area, she's best known for her work with Bonnie Hayes and the Wild Combo, a band that released the album "Good Clean Fun" and toured with Huey and the News in their '80s heyday. An eponymous solo album followed on Chrysalis Records and featured the single "Some Guy," which was covered by Cher, the first time one of her songs was recorded by another artist.

Her big break came when she was in L.A., getting ready to go on the road with the Go-Go's Belinda Carlyle. Raitt came to her hotel room and asked to record her songs "Love Letter" and "Have a Heart" for her 1989 album, "Nick of Time," which would sell 6 million copies and win three Grammys, including Record of the Year. "Have a Heart" was the album's biggest hit. Just like that, Raitt was a superstar and Hayes was a songwriter to be reckoned with.

"It brought me into the A-level of songwriters," she remembered. "I was gratified to be taken seriously as a songwriter by the big boys."

Since her latest solo CD, "Love in the Ruins," in 2004, she has occasionally performed with her bands Superbonbons and Mystery Dance and has been playing keys with Danny Click and the Hell Yeahs.

She's reluctant to sing "Have a Heart" or "Love Letters" when she performs these days, joking, "I'm off beating my famousness to death. I always feel like I'm pulling out my gun and waving it around."

But she doesn't deny what those songs have done for her, and continue to do for her.

"They've given me credibility," she said. "And that cred is what got me this job."

Contact Paul Liberatore via email at liberatore@marinij.com; follow him on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LibLarge. Follow his blog at http://blogs.marinij.com/ad_lib.

if you go

What: Bye-Bye Bonnie Bash, featuring Bonnie Hayes and Mystery Dance
Where: Rancho Nicasio, 1 Old Rancheria Road, on the Town Square, Nicasio
When: 8:30 p.m. July 20
Admission: $15
Information: www.rancho nicasio.com

Source: http://www.marinij.com/lifestyles/ci_23681965/lib-at-large-songwriter-bonnie-hayes-heading-bostons?source=rss_viewed

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Hot Shots Golf: World Invitational Putts PlayStation 3 Next Week

Hole in one

Hot Shots Golf: World Invitational

Just in time to celebrate the Open ? and Rory McIlroy?s confidence crisis ? Sony has announced that it?s bringing the PlayStation 3 version of Hot Shots Golf: World Invitational to Europe and North America next week. The arcade golf game ? which struck an albatross on the PlayStation Vita last year ? will be available from the PlayStation Store for ?11.99/$19.99.

While there?s no mention of cross-buy compatibility for the core experience, you will be able to share any purchased DLC between the console and handheld releases. The title will also boast cross-play, allowing you to compete against Vita owners on the PS3 and vice versa. The re-release will even include PlayStation Move support, allowing you to properly impersonate Nick Faldo in your living room.

While this is a welcome surprise, we?re keeping our fingers crossed for a PlayStation 4 version of Hot Shots Tennis. Put your hands together in the comments section if you reckon that that would be ace.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/pushsquare/~3/ZtXlLKEgTqU/hot_shots_golf_world_invitational_putts_playstation_3_next_week

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NFL Teams Enjoying the Best Offseasons so Far

The Kansas City Chiefs had a miserable 2012 season, bottoming out with the worst record in football at 2-14.

With that said: No team is poised to have a bigger turnaround in 2013 than the Chiefs, and they have an impressive offseason to thank for that.

First was the hiring of head coach Andy Reid, who brings a proven track record of success. He was the perfect hire. New general manager John Dorsey is fantastic at his job as well.

The team promptly traded for quarterback Alex Smith, and while Smith will never be confused with Joe Montana, he's certainly an upgrade over the Matt Cassel/Brady Quinn pu-pu platter.?

Then, the Chiefs selected Central Michigan offensive tackle Eric Fisher with the first overall pick of the 2013 draft, and Fisher should be an impact starter from day one.

This offseason, the Chiefs improved their coaching staff, front office and roster. That's a winning combination.

Source: http://bleacherreport.com/articles/1709927-nfl-teams-enjoying-the-best-offseasons-so-far

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Friday, July 19, 2013

IFT 2013: Day two in pictures... LycoRed ups the ante on bug-derived colors, palm oil, Mommy bloggers and hot new flavors

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Looking back on 2012: The year in pictures

Looking back on 2012: The year in pictures

It's been another big year for the food industry, with food taxes,?palm oil,?GM maize, nutrition labelling and...

HiE 2012 - As it happened

HiE 2012 - As it happened

The NutraIngredients and FoodNavigator teams bring you the latest news, views, pictures and tweets from the Health...

The 20 most significant food inventions of all time

The 20 most significant food inventions of all time

The Royal Society, the UK's national academy of science, has issued a list of what it considers...

IFT 2012: Day three in pictures. From high oleic soy to 'toxic' sugar...

IFT 2012: Day three in pictures. From high oleic soy to 'toxic' sugar...

Sleep deprived but indefatigable, the FoodNavigator-USA team powered through day three of the IFT show in Las...

IFT 2012: Day two in pictures. From whole algalin flour to the next generation of hot flavors

IFT 2012: Day two in pictures. From whole algalin flour to the next generation of hot flavors

Day two of the IFT annual meeting and expo in Las Vegas, and the FoodNavigator-USA team was...

IFT 2012: Day one in pictures. From Ingredion to Elvis...

IFT 2012: Day one in pictures. From Ingredion to Elvis...

The IFT annual meeting and expo in Las Vegas started as it meant to go on, with...

In Pictures: A Year in the Food Industry

FoodNavigator.com presents a photo gallery round-up of some of the biggest news stories of the year.

Our 2011 dairy digest: relive the stories that made a milk splash this year...

Our 2011 dairy digest: relive the stories that made a milk splash this year...

From killer ice cream to Nestl? and Danone cancelling or suspending local operations in China, 2011 was...

Vitafoods 2011 in pictures

Couldn't make it to Vitafoods? The NutraIngredients team snaps its way around the show so you can...

April 2011 in pictures: Pietro Ferrero, Givaudan, and rose-smelling sweets

April 2011 in pictures: Pietro Ferrero, Givaudan, and rose-smelling sweets

FoodNavigator.com shares some of the images behind the news headlines in April.

Source: http://www.foodnavigator-usa.com/Publications/Food-Beverage-Nutrition/foodnavigator.com/Financial-Industry/IFT-2013-Day-two-in-pictures-LycoRed-ups-the-ante-on-bug-derived-colors-palm-oil-Mommy-bloggers-and-hot-new-flavors?utm_source=RSS_gallery_news

Hugo Chavez Dead Bonnie Franklin sinkhole Real Madrid Vs Manchester United Duck Dynasty sequestration Van Cliburn

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

IRS sued for seizing medical records - Business Management Daily

A yet-to-be ?disclosed health care provider is suing the IRS and 15 of its agents, alleging that medical records of 10 million Americans were illegally seized. The lawsuit claims the IRS violated the Fourth Amendment when the agents executed a search warrant for financial information on just one employee, turning it into a raid of epic proportions. The complaint said the search warrant failed to specify that the IRS could investigate medical records. Furthermore, information technology officials on the premises warned that the seizure might violate medical privacy laws. Finally, the lawsuit also alleges that the IRS wrongfully seized telephone records of workers.

What?s at stake? The company is seeking damages of $25,000 per violation.

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