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China rules out Sino-Japanese summit - state media

BEIJING/TOKYO | Tue Jul 30, 2013 5:45am BST

BEIJING/TOKYO (Reuters) - China has ruled out the possibility of a proposed summit with Japan after Tokyo suggested the meeting in a bid to defuse an increasingly bitter territorial row, the official China Daily reported on Tuesday.

The report, quoting a statement by an unidentified Chinese official made on Monday, coincided with a visit to Beijing by Japanese Vice Foreign Minister Akitaka Saiki.

Saiki's visit is the latest effort by Tokyo to improve ties soured by the row over tiny, uninhabited islands in the East China Sea claimed by both countries.

Chinese and Japanese officials were tight-lipped about who Saiki would meet in Beijing, where he arrived on Monday.

Hawkish Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who cemented his grip on power in an upper house election last week, has been signalling a desire for dialogue with China - although he has also rejected any conditions set by Beijing.

At the same time, Japan has raised its assessment of the risk of China's military buildup and maritime assertiveness.

The unidentified Chinese official urged the Japanese government to take concrete measures to improve strained ties rather than "empty slogans", the China Daily reported.

In Tokyo, a Japanese foreign ministry source said he had not seen the China Daily report and could not comment on it directly, but a summit could still be held at the right time.

"It is true no concrete date is set for a leaders' summit or foreign ministers' summit," the Japanese source said. "But this does not mean there will never be one in the future."

The China Daily also said statements by Abe adviser Isao Iijima that a summit between Abe and President Xi Jinping could occur in the "not-too-distant future" were misleading.

Iijima's statements were based on conversations with Chinese officials in Beijing in mid-July.

The Chinese foreign ministry said on its website on Monday that Iijima had not met any Chinese government officials recently, despite reports on Sunday that he had.

The English-language China Daily quoted the Chinese official as saying: "What Iijima told reporters on Sunday is not true and is fabricated, based on the needs of Japan's domestic politics."

Often fragile Sino-Japanese ties have been further strained since September, when the territorial row over the East China Sea islands flared following the nationalisation of the islands by Abe's predecessor last September.

Concern that Abe, who came to power in December, wants to recast Japan's wartime history with a less apologetic tone added to the tension. Critics have also accused the Chinese Communist Party of manipulating domestic opinion through anti-Japanese propaganda to buttress its own legitimacy.

YASUKUNI HURDLE

Experts in Japan say both sides, as well as Tokyo's security ally the United States, would like to calm the tension to avoid an unintended clash near the islands, where Japanese and Chinese planes and patrol ships have been playing cat-and-mouse.

Abe may also be hoping to repeat one of the few successes of his troubled 2006-2007 term in office, when he thawed ties with China that had frayed during the five-year stint of his predecessor, Junichiro Koizumi.

Analysts said, however, that Abe may have been overconfident about prospects for talks following his ruling bloc's big win in the July 21 upper house election. The victory ended a parliamentary deadlock and set the stage for Japan's first long-term government since Koizumi's 2001-2006 term.

"I think the Abe government got confident thinking that now ... that they have a secure majority, China should know that Abe is here for the long term and they have to deal with him," said Sophia University professor Koichi Nakano.

Nakano also said it was unlikely China would want to commit to any summit at least before seeing whether Abe or other top officials, such as Deputy Prime Minister Taro Aso, visit Tokyo's Yasukuni Shrine on the emotive August 15 anniversary of Japan's defeat in World War Two.

A visit to Yasukuni would outrage public opinion in China, where many view the shrine as a symbol of Japan's past militarism because it honours Japanese leaders convicted as war criminals by an Allied tribunal along with war dead.

"It would be surprising for China to agree to a fast improvement in relations before August 15," Nakano said.

Experts say the main sticking point to a Sino-Japanese summit is whether the two sides can find a way to set aside the row and focus on other aspects of relations between the world's second- and third-biggest economies.

China wants Japan first to acknowledge that a formal dispute exists, a step that Tokyo has rejected for fear it would undermine its claim to sovereignty of the isles, known as the Senkaku in Japan and the Diaoyu in China, the experts said.

(Reporting by Pete Sweeney in SHANGHAI and Linda Sieg in TOKYO; Editing by Paul Tait)

Source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/Reuters/UKWorldNews/~3/ZuS9moUAkv0/uk-china-japan-idUKBRE96T02A20130730

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Zimbabwe campaign ends with PM pushing Mugabe to retirement

By Ed Cropley

HARARE (Reuters) - Zimbabwe Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai vowed to pack entrenched President Robert Mugabe off into retirement at a thunderous final campaign rally on Monday, capping a high-spirited election race that has gone down to the wire.

With no reliable opinion polls, it is hard to say whether 61-year-old Tsvangirai will succeed on Wednesday in his third attempt to unseat his 89-year-old rival, who has run the southern African nation since independence from Britain in 1980.

To judge by the vociferous support for Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) and Mugabe's joking references to his own chances of success in Harare, the veteran president's ZANU-PF party is a long shot to take the capital in the vote.

The result hinges on whether Mugabe's control of the state media and security forces, the loyalty of independence war veterans and rural voters, and alleged irregularities with the voters' register, are enough to secure Africa's oldest leader another five years in power.

Speaking to 50,000 red-clad supporters in a Harare parade ground, Tsvangirai struck a conciliatory note towards Mugabe, saying he was not after revenge or prosecution, despite the death of 200 MDC supporters in disputed polls in 2008.

"After all this is done, I want President Mugabe to enjoy his retirement in the peace and comfort of his home," Tsvangirai told the crowd. "It's time for new blood and new ideas."

In return, MDC supporters, some perched high in trees to get a better glimpse, chanted "Bye Bye, Mugabe, we'll miss you". Many waved placards saying "89, 90, Game Over", a reference to the advanced years of the former guerrilla chief who led the fight against white minority rule in former Southern Rhodesia.

Mugabe receives regular medical treatment in Singapore, but denies reports he has been suffering from prostate cancer.

"CRY BABY"

The elections bring the curtain down on four years of fractious unity government brokered by South Africa and other countries in the region after the violence-marred 2008 poll.

Around 6.4 million people, almost half the population, are registered to vote although critics say the list is riddled with irregularities such as legions of dead people and, in some areas, more voters than residents.

At his final rally on Sunday, Mugabe dismissed Tsvangirai's charges of ZANU-PF vote rigging as the unfounded complaints of a "political cry baby", warning him to respect laws giving only the Zimbabwe Election Commission the power to announce results.

"I can tell you in advance that if you breach the law and become a law breaker, the police will arrest you," he said to cheers from thousands of supporters at a Harare stadium.

The election law says the results of the parliamentary and presidential vote should be known by August 5, although it is likely to come well before that.

Western observers are barred but the African Union and Southern African Development Community have nearly 500 monitors between them. More than 7,000 domestic observers are also accredited and tallies are to be posted outside each of the 9,735 polling stations in a bid to prevent vote-rigging.

Despite the extra transparency and greater use of technology such as mobile phones and the Internet, Tsvangirai supporters were resigned to the prospect of post-poll shenanigans, although they said the overall result was not under threat.

"The MDC always wins and then ZANU-PF steals it," said Saxon, a 32-year-old engineer, who did not want to give his family name for fear of reprisals. "But this time they won't get away with it."

After chaotic early voting for 70,000 police and civil servants, South African President Jacob Zuma's top Zimbabwe envoy said preparations for the poll were "not looking good", unusually strong words from Zimbabwe's powerful neighbor.

The United States and Britain have also voiced concerns, suggesting they are in no mood to lift the anti-Mugabe sanctions that prevent Harare normalizing relations with the International Monetary Fund and World Bank.

Mugabe, who has depicted Tsvangirai as a puppet of the West, accused Washington of being "absolutely insane".

Easing sanctions is seen as critical to getting Zimbabwe's economy back on track after a decade-long economic meltdown until 2009, blamed on Mugabe policies such as the seizure of white-owned commercial farms.

The precipitous decline, which included hyperinflation of 500 billion percent, only ended when the unity government scrapped the worthless Zimbabwe dollar. But despite some improvement from agriculture and diamond mining, the economy is struggling to take off due to lack of investment capital.

One of Tsvangirai's top election officials was arrested at the weekend on charges of tampering with ballot papers, a move unlikely to soften Western criticism that the run-up to the polls has been short of 'free and fair'.

(Reporting by Ed Cropley; Editing by Paul Taylor)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/zimbabwe-campaign-ends-pm-pushing-mugabe-retirement-153228850.html

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Video: Earnings picture isn't looking that great: Expert

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LITTLE LEAGUE BASEBALL: Sherman Oaks South's 12-under all-stars come up short of Western Regional bid

Eastlake's Nick Mura strikes out eight, holds locals hitless the final four innings to secure Southern California title.

LONG BEACH -- The dream is over for Sherman Oaks South Little League.

The 11- and 12-year-olds advanced all the way to the Southern California championship series after a month-long baseball run that including 10 consecutive victories, but the end came Sunday in a 5-0 loss to Eastlake of Chula Vista to finish a two-game sweep before an overflow crowd at Stearns Champions Park.

Eastlake (13-0) advances to the Western Regional in San Bernardino -- the last stop before the World Series in Williamsport, Pa. -- while Sherman Oaks South (10-2) can only ponder the what-ifs.

"I just love this team, and I've loved the ride," Sherman Oaks infielder Charlie Mendez said. "Eastlake is a good team, and their pitching was just outstanding."

Sherman Oaks South went hitless over the final four innings and advanced a total of one runner past first base.

"We just ran into a team of monsters from top to bottom. Eastlake was just outstanding," Sherman Oaks South manager Chris Dollard said.

"Their pitching was great and just so consistent, and our hitters were just stumped. It's by far the best pitching we've faced."

Sherman Oaks South advanced the furthest in the league's 51-year history.

Eastlake built a three-run lead in the first inning on Nick Mura's two-run homer, followed by Giancarlo Cortez's solo shot.

From there, Sherman Oaks South right-hander Stephen Richardson found his groove, retiring nine of the next 11 before Eastlake rallied in the fourth to pad the lead to

5-0.

With two outs, pinch-hitter Charlie Peterson single to right, followed by Micah Wiggs' line-drive two-run homer over the left-field fence -- his second in as many days -- prompting Tyler Cox to come on in relief.

Sherman Oaks South's Noah Taylor doubled up the gap in right-center with one out in the first, but Mura pitched his way out of it. The right-hander got R.J. Schreck on a grounder, then Richardson flied deep to center for the third out.

Mura also went 3 for 3 with two RBIs and Wiggs was 1 for 1 with two walks. In the two-game series, he reached base every at-bat except once.

Sherman Oaks South never threatened again. Mura, displaying a good fastball and a hard-breaking curve, got the win, going five innings with three hits allowed and eight strikeouts.

Sherman Oaks South had hit at least one home run every game until the series against Eastlake, which became the first District 42 team since Park View of Chula Vista in 2009 to win the Southern California championship.

Ryan Dollard singled in the second for Sherman Oaks South, and Charlie Stern added a single in the third.

Source: http://www.dailynews.com/sports/ci_23750773/little-league-baseball-sherman-oaks-souths-12-under?source=rss

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Microsoft focusing on increasing Windows Phone volume with GDR2; features coming later

Windows Phone 8 Volume

One area where it?s always difficult to please your audience is in regards to technology. Between hardware and software advancements you have a public who not only yearns but demands frequent updates for their devices. Some of it is rational and some of it resembles the tantrums of children. But somewhere in between, there is the truth.

Microsoft is in a precarious situation with Windows Phone as they have a lot of so-called 'chicken versus egg' problems to solve. For instance, they need more mainstream apps. But in order to get more apps, they have to have enough devices in user?s hands to convince developers to get on board with Windows Phone. But how can you convince people to buy your phone if you don?t have the apps (either real or perceived)?

With Windows Phone 8 build 10327 (GDR2), Microsoft is pushing out their second minor update for their new operating system this year (the first was GDR1 aka Portico). The concern for a lot of current users is GDR2 doesn?t really bring much to the table in terms of new features. Sure FM radio and an improved Xbox Music library are nice to have, but it?s far from the dozens of features people are demanding on Microsoft?s UserVoice forum.

The GDR2/GDR3 gambit?grow device availability

Part of the problem is also a misunderstanding of Microsoft?s strategy: GDR2 is less about new features and more about enabling new hardware.? Same thing with the GDR3 release, expected around October, empowering next generation Qualcomm chipsets and 1080P displays.

More specifically, devices like the Nokia Lumia 1020 are built around GDR2. Sure, current Windows Phones will benefit from GDR2 but the Lumia 1020 needs it. Things like ?dual capture? were not possible before within the OS, but Nokia wanted it badly in order to bring their 41MP vision to Windows Phone. As a result, Microsoft had to devote development resources to make that happen. In fact, a lot of the camera ability is a result of the Microsoft-Nokia partnership e.g. setting the default camera app.

This is one reason why Nokia is happy with the Microsoft deal, because they can focus on building great hardware while Microsoft worries about the OS.

That?s not to say everything is great between the two companies, as recent comments by Nokia vice president Bryan Biniak to the International Business Times suggest. Biniak publicly criticized Microsoft for dragging its feet on getting big name apps to Windows Phone. While Redmond seems content on getting apps on a schedule, Nokia is more about the right now. As Biniak states:

?To give you a reason to switch, I need to make sure the apps that you care about on your device are not only on our phones, but are better. I also need to provide you unique experiences that you can't get on your other devices."

?We are trying to evolve the cultural thinking [at Microsoft] to say 'time is of the essence.' Waiting until the end of your fiscal year when you need to close your targets, doesn't do us any good when I have phones to sell today."

Nokia gets it, but evidently Microsoft is still adapting. Still, as a whole, the two companies are working together and shaping the ecosystem based around what Nokia and the other OEMs want. Think LTE, think low-cost devices. Windows Phone was shockingly not going to get LTE support until Windows Phone 8 and Nokia is clearly eating up the entry-level handset market with the Lumia 520, Lumia 620 and Lumia 625. Both of those changes in strategy are partner-influence in action.

More boats for more passengers

It should now be clear that Microsoft?s strategy in 2013 is about enabling more hardware options for their OEMs partners. More chipsets, more display options, deeper level access to the OS plumbing, etc. The idea is to flood the market with many levels of devices, from mid-range to high end ?wow? gadgets like the Lumia 1020 to what actually sells en masse, the Lumia 520.

Is the strategy working? At least one analyst thinks so. Dominic Sunnebo, over at Kantar Worldpanel ComTech notes in today?s market report:

?While flagship Windows handsets such as the Nokia 925 and HTC 8X grab the headlines, it is the low and mid-range models, such as the Nokia Lumia 520 and 620, which are quietly driving its momentum. It is vital for Windows to be seen as a mainstream alternative to Android and iOS rather than a niche platform. Selling large volumes of lower end smartphones is a good way of getting Windows seen in the hands of potential customers? friends and family, convincing them there isn?t a risk in choosing the operating system. The majority of people are trend followers, not trend setters, so Windows needs to get as many smartphones to market as quickly as possible.?

Microsoft?s corporate vice president and manager for Windows Phone Program, Joe Belfiore, admitted as much when responding to a recent complaint on Twitter about the company not moving fast enough with OS updates:

?Different people want lots of different things.? Most of you want apps like Instagram?for that we need to increase volume.?

Ding ding. While it has always been speculated the reason Instagram won?t release an app is due to low Windows Phone market share, it now appears to be confirmed. Microsoft needs to get more phones in more people?s hands if they want those apps.

That?s why Microsoft is devoting so much to GDR2 and GDR3, seemingly paying more attention to their OEM partners than current customer demands (we say ?seemingly? because we know Microsoft does care, but priorities, folks).

The tradeoff

Lumia 520

And that?s just it: In order for Microsoft to focus on enabling new hardware and radical innovations like the Lumia 1020, they had to take their resources away from straight up ?feature updates? akin to what Windows Phone 7.5 Mango did earlier, packing 500 new functions or improvements.

Mind you, we?re not trying to justify their strategy, but merely explain it as we see it for a better understanding.

Windows Phone 8.1 Blue appears to be the big overhaul of the OS, where new features and functionality to bring it closer to Windows 8.1 desktop will become evident. Things like syncing of Accent color across devices, more location services, actionable notifications for developers, notification center and more are all being considered for that update due in early 2014.

So what's better: Have Blue's features on fewer handsets earlier or Windows Phone Blue on more devices, but later? That's an interesting question.

But why not do both, you say? We?re not privy to how Microsoft operates, their budget nor how their strategy meetings progress, but it seems to us from observers on the outside that like most organizations, they have limits on resources preventing them from doing everything at once.

Clearly some market research firms, like Kantar, see the benefit of going for entry-level devices before Apple gets in there (see our earlier editorial ?Nokia well positioned for approaching smartphone price wars as costs plummet?). Others though will disagree, noting that Microsoft should beef up the OS and that will sell devices.

Microsoft does have a lot of problems to solve with Windows Phone. The user base is rightly getting frustrated with the lack of frequent feature-packed OS updates, the delays from carriers approving those updates and the seemingly far off Windows Phone 8.1 Blue update. It also gives a lot of ammo to critics and detractors. Will Microsoft prevail? We hope so, but some recent market share numbers suggest they still have a long way to go.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/wmexperts/~3/hHLvths7oaY/story01.htm

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Refresh Roundup: week of July 22nd, 2013

Your smartphone and / or tablet is just begging for an update. From time to time, these mobile devices are blessed with maintenance refreshes, bug fixes, custom ROMs and anything in between, and so many of them are floating around that it's easy for a sizable chunk to get lost in the mix. To make sure they don't escape without notice, we've gathered every possible update, hack, and other miscellaneous tomfoolery we could find during the last week and crammed them into one convenient roundup. If you find something available for your device, please give us a shout at tips at engadget dawt com and let us know. Enjoy!

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/ixXjmN7Ak24/

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Pope draws 3M to Mass as Brazil trip closes

Pope Francis waves from his popemobile along the Copacabana beachfront on his way to celebrate Mass in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Sunday, July 28, 2013. Hundreds of thousands of young people slept under chilly skies in the white sand awaiting Francis? final Mass for World Youth Day. (AP Photo/Jorge Saenz)

Pope Francis waves from his popemobile along the Copacabana beachfront on his way to celebrate Mass in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Sunday, July 28, 2013. Hundreds of thousands of young people slept under chilly skies in the white sand awaiting Francis? final Mass for World Youth Day. (AP Photo/Jorge Saenz)

Pope Francis celebrates Mass on Copacabana beach, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Sunday, July 28, 2013. Francis wrapped up a historic trip to his home continent Sunday with a Mass on Copacabana beach, urging the young people on hand for World Youth Day's concluding Mass to go out and spread their faith "to the fringes of society, even to those who seem farthest away, most indifferent." (AP Photo/Victor R. Caivano)

Nuns wade in the Copacabana beach water, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Sunday, July 28, 2013. Pope Francis wrapped up a historic trip to his home continent Sunday with a Mass on the Copacabana beachfront that drew a reported 3 million people. (AP Photo/Nicolas Tanner)

Pope Francis holds his papal crucifix during the World Youth Day's concluding Mass on the Copacabana beachfront in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, July 28, 2013. Francis wrapped up a historic trip to his home continent Sunday with the Mass on Copacabana beach, urging the young people on hand to go out and spread their faith "to the fringes of society, even to those who seem farthest away, most indifferent." (AP Photo/Luca Zennaro, Pool)

Clergy attend a Mass celebrated by Pope Francis on the Copacabana beachfront, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Sunday, July 28, 2013. Francis wrapped up a historic trip to his home continent Sunday with a Mass that drew a reported 3 million people. (AP Photo/Felipe Dana)

RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) ? An estimated 3 million people poured onto Rio's Copacabana beach Sunday for the final Mass of Pope Francis' historic trip to his home continent, cheering the first Latin American pope in one of the biggest turnouts for a papal Mass in recent history.

Speaking from a white stage and looking out over the enormous crowd, Francis urged young Catholics to go out and spread their faith "to the fringes of society, even to those who seem farthest away, most indifferent."

"The church needs you, your enthusiasm, your creativity and the joy that is so characteristic of you!" he said to applause in his final homily of the World Youth Day festivities.

Later Sunday, he issued a more pointed message to the region's bishops, telling them to better look out for their flocks and put an end to the "clerical" culture that places priests on a pedestal ? often with what Francis called the "sinful complicity" of lay Catholics who hold the clergy in such high esteem.

The pope's trip, which ended Sunday, was hailed as a success by the Vatican, pilgrims and everyday Brazilians alike. His nonstop agenda was followed live on television for all seven days, his good nature and modesty charming a nation that counts more Catholics than any other.

"It was great to see the pope on his continent, in his house, speaking his language every day," said the Rev. Federico Lombardi, the Vatican spokesman.

Nearly the entire 4 kilometer (2.5 mile) crescent of Copacabana's broad beach overflowed with flag-waving faithful, some of them taking an early morning dip in the Atlantic and others tossing T-shirts, flags and soccer jerseys into the pontiff's open-sided car as he drove by. Francis worked the crowd, kissing babies, taking a sip of mate tea handed up to him and catching gifts on the fly.

Even the normally stern-faced Vatican bodyguards let smiles slip as they jogged alongside Francis' car, caught up in the enthusiasm of the crowd.

The numbers clearly overwhelmed the area's services: The stench of garbage and human waste hung in Rio's humid air, and the beach and adjoining chic Atlantic Avenue looked like an improvised refugee camp plunked down in the middle of one of the world's most beautiful cities. Copacabana's famous mosaic sidewalks were strewn with trampled cardboard, plastic bags, empty water bottles and cookie wrappers as trash collectors in orange uniforms tried to restore order.

"You'd think they could at least put their garbage in all the bins," said Jose da Silva, a 75-year-old retired farm worker who supplements his meager income by collecting empty cans for recycling. "I'm also pretty surprised that people who call themselves Christians would throw away all this food."

Many of the youngsters on hand for the Mass spent the night on the beach, an all-night slumber party to end the Catholic youth fest, with pilgrims wrapped in flags and sleeping bags to ward off the cold.

"We were dying of cold but it was worth it," said Lucrecia Grillera, an 18-year-old from Cordoba, Argentina, where Francis lived for a time before becoming pope. "It was a tiring day, but it was a great experience."

By morning, vendors hawking World Youth Day trinkets, T-shirts, hats and flags were doing brisk business as pilgrims snapped up souvenirs before heading home. Jehovah's Witnesses stood by stands stocked with pamphlets offering to explain "What does the Bible really teach" but they had few takers.

The Vatican said more than 3 million people were on hand for the Mass, based on information from World Youth Day organizers and local authorities who estimated two-thirds were from outside Rio. That was far higher than the 1 million at the last World Youth Day in Madrid in 2011 or the 850,000 at Toronto's 2002 concluding Mass.

Only Pope John Paul II's Mass during his 1995 visit to Manila, the capital of the Philippines, topped Rio's numbers, with an estimated 5 million people taking part. Third place among papal Masses now goes to Rome's World Youth Day in the 2000 Jubilee year, when 2 million people participated. A similar number attended John Paul's final Mass in Krakow, his Polish hometown, in 1979, during his first visit to his homeland as pope.

As if recalling that historic Mass, Francis announced Sunday that the next World Youth Day would be held in Krakow in 2016.

The presidents of Brazil, Francis' native Argentina, Bolivia and Suriname were on hand for the Mass, as were the vice presidents of Uruguay and Panama. Receiving a special honor was a couple Francis met on Saturday after Mass at Rio's cathedral; they had brought him their anencephalic baby daughter to be blessed. Francis invited them to participate in the offertory procession on Sunday, at which the father wore a T-shirt that read "Stop abortion."

After Sunday's Mass, Francis met with the bishops of Latin America and the Caribbean, telling them that they must be spiritually close to their flock, a point he has made before in saying pastors must have the "scent of their flock" on them. He said bishops must love poverty, look out for their faithful and not be ambitious themselves.

The pope also scheduled a thank-you audience with some of the 60,000 volunteers who organized the youth festival before flying to Rome. Local broadcasters showed thousands of young people packed into a vast conference center hall as they waited for the pope.

"It was such an excellent week, everybody was in such good spirit, you could just feel a sense of peace," said Denise da Silva, a Rio de Janeiro Catholic who was sitting alone on the beach Sunday morning, a Brazilian flag painted on her face. "I have never seen something here in Rio so marvelous as what we have just lived."

Francis spent the week emphasizing a core message: of the need for Catholics, lay and religious, to shake up the status quo, get out of their stuffy sacristies and reach the faithful on the margins of society or risk losing them to rival churches.

According to census data, the number of Catholics in Brazil dipped from 125 million in 2000 to 123 million in 2010, with the church's share of the total population dropping from 74 percent to 65 percent. During the same time period, the number of evangelical Protestants and Pentecostals jumped from 26 million to 42 million, increasing from 15 percent to 22 percent of the population in 2010.

Francis repeated that stirring message Sunday in his homily, saying he was counting on young Catholics in particular to be "missionary disciples" in spreading the faith.

"Bringing the Gospel is bringing God's power to pluck up and break down evil and violence, to destroy and overthrow the barriers and selfishness, intolerance and hatred, so as to build a new world," he said.

It seemed the message was getting through.

"I used to go to Mass every week but now I go every other week, if that," said Larissa Miranda, a 20-year-old law student from rural Rio de Janeiro state who moved to the city two years ago. "But this event had made me realize that I need to get active again and get back to church every week."

The Rev. Jean-Luc Zadroga, a Benedictine monk who was leading a group of 14 students from a Catholic university in Latrobe, Pennsylvania, said it was clear Francis had connected with the crowd, particularly the locals.

"He's really trying to reach out to Catholics who have fallen away from the church or disappointed with the church and I think it's working," he said.

___

Associated Press writers Marco Sibaja and Bradley Brooks contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-07-28-LT-Brazil-Pope/id-312f2ad4e0e048009c78eea81aa07fc8

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Video: Epic Supercar Sounds From London

Video: Epic Supercar Sounds From London

As we all well and truly know by now, London in the summer is home to some of the world?s greatest supercars and while all of these can be showstoppers standing still, the real action takes place when the throttle is put to the floor. And the latest video below celebrates that by bringing together a selection of supercar sounds in a brief 1 minute 15 second video!

Included in the following video are a selection of Lamborghini Aventadors, including Nasser Al-Thani?s ;Tron? inspired one, an Aston Martin DBS, Lamborghini Gallardo LP570-4 Performante, Audi R8 GT Spyder, numerous Mercedes-Benz SLS AMGs, a couple of Ferrari 458 Italias and a Lamborghini Gallardo Superleggera! What is your favourite sound in the video above?

Supercars in London Photo Gallery

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/GTspirit/~3/97Kyh8Mwr4o/

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RAW VIDEO: Johnny 'Football' Manziel gets booted from UT frat party

by Andrew Delgado / Kens5.com

kens5.com

Posted on July 28, 2013 at 4:28 PM

Updated today at 4:36 PM

SAN ANTONIO -- Johnny 'Football' Manziel has made national news once again -- this time for getting kicked out of University of Texas frat party.

On Friday night, the Heisman-winning quarterback stopped by a UT frat party. Within minutes, Manziel was asked to leave -- cell-phone video shows people chucking beer and insults at the star player as he was escorted out of the party.

-------> Click here to see the video on bleacherreport.com

Manziel was allegedly chastised for wearing a pink polo and drinking light beer.

One tweet read, "A keystone light?! C'mon! You're Johnmy Freaking Football! Step up your game."

On Saturday, Manziel attended another UT frat party -- this time with the brothers of Phi Gamma Delta. He was not asked to leave.

Manziel has received mixed emotions in Texas, particularly in Austin. It is widely rumored that Manziel wanted to go to the University of Texas, but was never offered a scholarship.

In February of 2013, Manziel received major criticism after a photo of him flashing UT?s 'hook 'em horns? hand sign surfaced on Twitter.

More controversy ignited when a picture on www.bustedcoverage.com was posted, showing the quarterback sporting a longhorn tattoo on his abdomen. Manziel later tweeted that the tattoo was fake.

Then, less than two weeks ago, Manziel was sent home from the Manning Football Camp after he slept through mandatory meetings.

After winning the Heisman trophy as a freshman at Texas A&M, Manziel has become something of a celebrity -- partying with musical superstars like Drake and 2 Chainz, and finding it increasingly difficult to stay out of the limelight.

'Johnny Football's' off-season headlines have nearly overshadowed the ones he's made on the field -- at least for now. Meanwhile, Texas A&M and UT fans alike will have to wait and see what the 2013 season holds in store.
?

Source: http://www.kens5.com/news/entertainment/Johnny-Football-Manziel-gets-booted-from-UT-frat-party-217311931.html

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One Direction Makeup Line, 'Little Things Collection,' To Be Released This Summer

Though all Directioners know that you "don't need makeup to cover up," in case you want it anyway, the boys of One Direction have officially launched their own makeup line.

The collection is called "Little Things" and will include products like lip gloss, lipsticks and nail polishes. The flavors will have hilariously awesome names like "Harry Loves Strawberry," "Zayn loves Watermelon," "Louis loves Vanilla," "Niall loves Cherry" and "Liam loves Blueberry."

Everything will apparently be cheap -- under five dollars -- and available starting July 31 in the U.K. Check out photos, below.

Harry, Liam, Louis, Niall and Zayn have also created a custom perfume sent, "Our Moment," which will be released in August.

1dlipstick

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Also on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/07/27/one-direction-makeup-line_n_3665033.html

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'Wolverine' Director Reveals Which Scenes Are Ripped From The Pages

The new X-Men movie was inspired by a famous story, but James Mangold wanted actors to get past the book.
By Kevin P. Sullivan, with reporting by Josh Horowitz

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1711374/wolverine-comic-book-influence.jhtml

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Italian police swoop on Mafia in Rome

Since their appearance in the middle of the 19th century, Italian organized crime and criminal organizations have infiltrated the social and economic life of many regions only in Southern Italy, the most notorious of which being the Sicilian Mafia, which would later expand into some foreign countries including the United States.

There are six known mafia organizations in Italy: Cosa Nostra of Sicily, 'Ndrangheta of Calabria and Camorra of Naples, are rather old: they started to develop between 1500 and 1800. Recently, two new organizations, Stidda and Sacra Corona Unita of Puglia have appeared.

Based primarily in Sicily, the Sicilian Mafia formed in the mid-19th century by clans which sprang out of groups of bandits; these groups gained local power and influence.[citation needed] In Sicily, the word Mafia tends to mean "manly" and a Mafioso considers himself a "Man of Honor." However, the organization is known as "Cosa Nostra" -- Our Thing?or Our Affair. The Sicilian Mafia originally engaged in such lower-level activities as extortion, cattle theft and, upon Sicily becoming part of a democratic Italy, election slugging in addition to other kinds of relatively low-level theft and fraud.[citation needed]

In the 1950s, Sicily experienced a massive building boom. Taking advantage of the opportunity, the Sicilian Mafia gained control of the building contracts and made millions of dollars.[citation needed] It participated in the growing business of large-scale heroin trafficking, both in Italy and Europe and in US-connected trafficking; a famous example of this are the French Connection smuggling with Corsican criminals and the Italian-American Mafia.

Today, the Sicilian Mafia has evolved into an international organized crime group. The Sicilian Mafia specializes in heroin trafficking, political corruption and military arms trafficking and is the most powerful and most active Italian Organized Crime Group in the United States with estimates of more than 2,500 Sicilian Mafia affiliates located there.[3] The Sicilian Mafia is also known to engage in arson, frauds, counterfeiting, and other racketeering crimes. It is estimated to have 3,500-4,000 core members with 100 clans, with around 50 in the city of Palermo alone[4]

The Sicilian Mafia has had influence in 'legitimate' power, particularly under the corrupt Christian Democratic governments from the 50's-early 90's. It has had influence with lawyers, financiers, and professionals; also it has had power and resources by bribing or pressuring politicians, judges and administrators. It has less of these now than previously on the heels of the Maxi-Trials, the campaign by magistrates Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino and other actions against corrupt politicians and judges; however it retains some influence.

The Sicilian Mafia became infamous for aggressive assaults on Italian law enforcement officials during the reign of Toto Riina. In Sicily the term "Excellent Cadaver" is used to distinguish the assassination of prominent government officials from the common criminals and ordinary citizens killed by the Mafia. Some of their high ranking victims include police commissioners, mayors, judges, police colonels and generals, and Parliament members.

On May 23, 1992, the Sicilian Mafia struck Italian law enforcement. At approximately 6:00 p.m., Italian Magistrate Giovanni Falcone, his wife, and three police body guards were killed by a massive bomb. Falcone, Director of Prosecutions (roughly, District Attorney) and for the court of Palermo and head of the special anti-Mafia investigative squad, had become the organization's most formidable enemy. His team was moving to prepare cases against most of the Mafia leadership. The bomb made a crater 30 feet in diameter in the road Falcone's caravan was traveling.

This became known as the Capaci Massacre. Less than two months later, on July 19, 1992, the Mafia struck Falcone's replacement, Judge Paolo Borsellino, also in Palermo, Sicily. Borsellino and five bodyguards were killed outside the apartment of Borsellino's mother when a car packed with explosives was detonated by remote control as the judge approached the front door of his mother's apartment.

In 1993 the authorities arrested Salvatore "Tot?" Riina, believed at the time to be the Capo di tutti capi and responsible directly or indirectly for scores if not hundreds of killings, after years of investigation which some believe was delayed by Mafia influence within the police and Carabinieri. After Riina's arrest control of the organization fell to Bernardo Provenzano who had come to reject Riina's strategy of war against the authorities in favor of a strategy of bribery, corruption and influence-peddling. As a consequence the rate of Mafia killings fell sharply but Mafia influence not only in the international drug and white slavery (prostitution) trade but locally in construction and public contracts in Sicily continued. Provenzano was himself captured in 2006 after being wanted for 43 years.

[edit] Stidda or La Stidda

La Stidda (Sicilian, star) is the name given to the Sicilian organization started by criminals Giuseppe Croce Benvento and Salvatore Calafato, both of Palmi di Montechiaro, Agrigento province. The Stidda's power bases are centered in the cities of Gela and Favara, Caltanissetta and Agrigento provinces. The organization's groups and activities have flourished in the cities of Agrigento, Catania, Siracusa and Enna in the provinces of the same name, Niscemi and Riesi of Caltanissetta province and Vittoria of Ragusa province, located mainly on the Southern and Eastern coasts of Sicily.

The Stidda has extended its power and influence into the mainland Italy provinces of Milano, Genova and Torino. The members of the organization are called stiddari in Caltanissetta province and stiddaroli in Agrigento province. Stidda members can be identified and sometimes introduced to each other by a tattoo of five greenish marks arranged in a circle, forming a star called "i punti della malavita" or "the points of the criminal life."

The Cosa Nostra wars of the late 1970s and early 1980s that brought the Corleonesi Clan and its vicious and ruthless leaders Luciano Leggio, Toto Riina and Bernardo Provenzano sometimes referred to as "Cosa Nuova" into power caused disorganization and disenchantment inside the traditional Cosa Nostra power base and values system, leaving the growing Stidda organization to counter Cosa Nostra's power, influence and expansion in Southern and Eastern Sicily. The Stidda membership was reinforced by Cosa Nostra men of honor such as those loyal to slain Capo Giuseppe DiCristina of Riesi who had defected from Cosa Nostra's ranks due to the bloodthirsty reign of the Corleonesi clan.

The organization also looked to enlarge its membership by absorbing local thugs and criminals (picciotti) who were at the margins of organized crime to gain more power and credibility in the Italian underworld. From 1978 to 1990, former Corleonesi clan leader and pretender to the Cosa Nostra's "Capo di Tutti Capi" title, Toto Riina, waged a war within Cosa Nostra and against the Stidda spreading death and terror among mafiosi and the public in his quest for a crime dictatorship, leaving over 500 in Cosa Nostra and over 1000 in La Stidda dead, including Stidda Capos Calogero Lauria and Vincenzo Spina.

With the 1993 capture and imprisonment of Toto Riina, along with the currently jailed Bernardo Provenzano's, "pax mafia," following a new, less violent and low key approach to criminal activities the Stidda has gained power, influence and credibility among the longer established criminal organizations within Italy and around the world, making itself an underworld player in the United States, Canada and Germany. The Stidda is sometimes called the "Fifth Mafia" in the Italian media and press.

[edit] Camorra or Neapolitan Mafia

The Camorra first appeared in Cagliari, the southernmost port of Sardinia during the Middle Ages, and was carried during the mid-16th century to Naples, in the Italian Peninsula by Sardinian mercenaries, making it the oldest mafia in Italy, even predating the Sicilian Cosa Nostra. It started as a military group constisting of vigilantes belonging to Sardinia, a sort of policemen who respected the law of Tuscany and later Spain, that in 16th century ruled Naples. Once released, these members formed "clans" in the cities and continued to grow in power. The Camorra made its fortune in reconstruction after a powerful earthquake ravaged the Campania region in 1980. The Camorra is considered the second largest IOC group with over 200 clans and approximately 7,000 members.[5]

The Camorra specializes in cigarette smuggling and receives payoffs from other criminal groups for any cigarette traffic through Italy. In the 1970s, the Sicilian Mafia convinced the Camorra to convert the cigarette smuggling routes into drug smuggling routes with the Sicilian Mafia's assistance but not all Camorra leaders agreed. This brought about the Camorra Wars between two factions and almost 400 men were murdered. Those opposed to drug trafficking lost the war.

It is believed that nearly 200 Camorra affiliates reside in the United States. Many came to the USA during the Camorra Wars ever since the 19th century, as proved by an old organization best known as Black Hand. The Camorra conducts money laundering, extortion, alien smuggling, robbery, blackmail, kidnapping, political corruption, and counterfeiting. Some believe it is now the strongest mafia in Italy.

Main article: 'Ndrangheta

Derived from the Greek word andragath?a meaning courage or loyalty, the 'Ndrangheta formed in the 1850s. The 'Ndrangheta consists of 160 cells and approximately 6,000 members, world-wide some estimate there to be as many as 10,000 core members[6] and specializes in kidnapping and political corruption. The 'Ndrangheta cells are loosely connected family groups based on blood relationships and marriages. 'Ndrangheta presence in the United States is estimated between 100 and 200 members and associates. The majority of that presence is in New York and Florida. The 'Ndrangheta is also known to engage in cocaine (controlling up to 80% of that flowing through Europe)[7] and heroin trafficking, murder, bombings, counterfeiting, illegal gambling, frauds, thefts, labor racketeering, loansharking, illegal immigration, and kidnapping.

The Basilischi are a mafia organization founded in 1994 in Potenza. This organization has assumed a role for the control of illegal activities in the region. They are believed to be an independently run 'ndrina from the Rosarno Alliance involving 5 clans of in the provinces of Reggio Calabria & Gioia Tauro plain. Not a lot is known of them.

There is another belief that this group was created by local crime bosses and criminals with the help of the Pesce and Serraino 'Ndrangheta clans from Rosarno in the northern and western areas of the region of Calabria and so would more than likely be smuggling drugs and arms up Italy into the rest of Italy for these Clans.[citation needed]

Sacra Corona Unita, (SCU) or United Sacred Crown, is a Mafia-like criminal organization from Apulia (in Italian Puglia) region in Southern Italy, and is especially active in the areas of Brindisi and Lecce and not, as people tend to believe, in the region as a whole. The SCU was originally founded in the late 1970s as the Nuova Grande Camorra Pugliese (assest in Foggia) by Camorra member Raffaele Cutolo, who wanted to expand his operations into Puglia.

However a few years later with the downfall of Cutolo the organization became operating all on its own under the leadership of Giuseppe Rogoli. Under his leadership the SCU mixed Pugliese interests and opportunities with 'Ndrangheta and Camorra traditions. Originally preying on Puglia's substantial wine and olive oil industries, the group moved into fraud, gunrunning and drug trafficking and made alliances with international criminal organizations such as the Russian and Albanian mafias, Colombian drug cartels and Asian organizations. The Sacra Corona Unita consists of about 50 Clans with approximately 2,000 Core members[8] and specializes in smuggling cigarettes, drugs, arms, and people.

Very few SCU members have been identified in the United States, however there are some links to individuals in Illinois, Florida and possibly New York. The Sacra Corona Unita is also involved in money laundering, extortion and political corruption and collects payoffs from other criminal groups for landing rights on the southeast coast of Italy. This territory is a natural gateway for smuggling to and from post-Communist countries like Croatia, Yugoslavia, and Albania.

With the decreasing importance of the Adriatic corridor as a smuggling canal (thanks to the normalization of the Balkans area) and a series of successful police and judicial operations against it in recent years the Sacra Corona Unita has been considered, if not actually defeated, reduced to a fraction of its former power, which peaked around the mid-1990s. There is evidence that this group originated from the 'Ndrangheta but it is not know if this was a splinter group or a indirect formation with help from clans of the 'Ndrangheta.

Local Rivals
The internal difficulties of the SCU aided the birth of antagonistic criminal groups such as:

  • Remo Lecce Libera: formed by some leading criminal figures from Lecce, who claim to be independent from any criminal group other than the 'Ndrangheta. The term Remo indicates Remo Morello, a criminal from the Salento area, killed by criminals from the Campania region because he opposed any external interference;
  • Nuova Famiglia Salentina: formed in 1986 by De Matteis Pantaleo, from Lecce and stemming from the Famiglia Salentina Libera born in the early 1980s as an autonomous criminal movement in the Salento area with no links with extra-regional Mafia expressions
  • Rosa dei Venti: formed in 1990 by De Tommasi in the Lecce prison, following an internal division in the SCU.[9]

The Mala del Brenta, also known as the Mala del Piovese or Malavita del Brenta has been in operation throughout the Veneto region, across Northern Italy and into Croatia/Yugoslavia, Malta, Hungary and possibly Austria for the past twenty years.

According to Article 416-bis cp, introduced into Italy in 1982, the Malavita del Brenta falls into the category of mafia-type organization displaying all the characteristics described therein.[1] This is in spite of its origins in the Northern Italian region of the Veneto, and its North Italian membership base. Having originally spawned from the Southern Italian organized crime syndicates, who had operated and infiltrated the Veneto region during the 70's, their vision of unifying Veneto banditry into a mafia-style syndicate was first realised under the leadership of Felice "Angel Face" Maniero throughout the 1980s and 90's.

These original Sicilian mafiosi, controlled much of the mafia activity in the Veneto, throughout the 60's and 70's, and included most notably: Salvatore "Totuccio" Contorno, Gaetano Fidanzati, Antonino Duca and Gaetano & Salvatore Badalamenti and Giuseppe Madonia. Veneti malavitosi, or underworld figures and bandits, learned from these Sicilians the necessary means for organizing themselves and taking the reins of control from the successive two decades.

Often referred to as the fifth and smallest of the Mafia organizations across Italy, it operates under the sanction of the Corleonesi clan from Sicily and has strong links with other Cosa Nostra families, the 'Ndrangheta, Camorra and Sacra Corona Unita.

There is a small number of 'foreign' criminal organizations operating in Italy, such as Chinese Triads, Nigerian gangs and the Albanian gangs, of which the Albanians seem to be the most prominent. The Albanian gangs mainly operate in the more affluent northern parts of Italy. All these organizations operate mostly in prostitution under the permission and the control of the Mafia.

Those currently active in the United States are the Sicilian Mafia, Camorra or Neapolitan Mafia, 'Ndrangheta or Calabrian Mafia, and Sacra Corona Unita or "United Sacred Crown". The FBI refers to them as "Italian Organized Crime" (IOC).

The FBI estimates the size of the four IOC groups to be approximately 25,000 members and 250,000 affiliates worldwide. There are more than 3,000 members and affiliates in the United States scattered mostly throughout the major cities in the Northeast, the Midwest, California, and the South. However, their largest presence centers around Boston, New York, northern New Jersey, and Philadelphia. Their criminal activities are international with members and affiliates in Canada, South America, Australia, and parts of Europe. These organizations are also known to collaborate with other international organized crime groups from all over the world.

There is a criminal organization in the French island of Corsica, known as the Unione Corse.

The major threat to American society posed by IOC groups centers around drug trafficking and money laundering. IOC groups have been involved in heroin trafficking for decades. Two major investigations which targeted IOC drug trafficking in the 1980s are known as the "French Connection" and "Pizza Connection." These and other investigations have documented their cooperation in drug trafficking with other major drug trafficking organizations. IOC groups are also involved in illegal gambling, political corruption, extortion, kidnapping, frauds, counterfeiting, infiltration of legitimate businesses, murders, bombings, and weapons trafficking. Industry experts in Italy estimate that their worldwide criminal activity is worth more than $100 billion annually.

Source: http://article.wn.com/view/2013/07/26/Italian_police_swoop_on_Mafia_in_Rome/

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Without Haswell, why bother buying a new Mac?

Without Haswell, why bother to buy a new Mac?

If you're in the market for a MacBook Air, times are great. Apple's new machines, updated in June with Intel's fourth-generation Core processor, are better values than ever. But if you need a MacBook Pro, iMac or Mac mini, the current crop of computers from Apple is looking long in the tooth. Is there any point in buying a new Mac until Apple completes the Haswell transition?

What's the big deal?

At its Worldwide Developer Conference in June, Apple took the wraps off a new crop of 11 and 13-inch MacBook Airs. The computers look almost unchanged from their predecessors, but under the hood it's a very different story. The new Intel Core processor, widely known by its code-name "Haswell," is considerably more power-efficient than the processor it replaces. The net result is that both machines see dramatically improved battery life - the 11-inch MacBook Air went from seven to nine hours of use per recharge, according to Apple's tests; the 13-inch jumped from nine hours to 12.

MacBook Air

MacBook Airs don't have discrete graphics processors - they're dependent on the integrated graphics processor (IGP) that's built into the CPU in order to render graphics. And Haswell delivers there, too - it's up to 40 percent faster than the chips which powered Apple's last MacBook Air.

The improvements to the MacBook Air don't end just at the Haswell chip. Apple's also taken the opportunity to upgrade the MacBook Air's wireless networking performance with 802.11ac. Also known colloquially as "Gigabit Wi-Fi," 802.11ac provides dramatically faster transfer speeds when paired with 802.11ac-compatible Wi-Fi routers like Apple's new AirPort Extreme and Time Machine.

The MacBook Air also relies on flash-based storage, and Apple didn't skimp there either. The company changed the way the MacBook Air's flash storage works - instead of using Serial ATA (SATA), the interface hard disk drives use to communicate, Apple migrated the MacBook Air to PCI Express (PCIe)-based storage instead. The net result is a 45 percent speed improvement over the previous-generation MacBook Air.

In the end, benchmarks for the new MacBook Air show that it lasts longer on a single charge and works way faster than the system it replaces. All told, it's a much better value for the same money you would have paid only a couple of months ago. But it also casts a shadow over the rest of Apple's product line, which is suddenly looking old and tired. (The Mac Pro is the one exception, as that's due for a complete redesign that's coming later this year.)

MacBook Pros show their age

The MacBook Pro is the Mac model most in need of a Haswell makeover. The standard MacBook Pro, equipped with non-Retina Display, hard disk drive and SuperDrive, last saw a refresh in June of 2012. The 13-inch MacBook Pro, priced at $1199, is one of Apple' most popular models.

Yet there's very little to recommend the 13-inch MBP over its MacBook Air cousin. It has an optical drive, if you're still dependent on such media, and it has a large hard drive, but it's hampered by the slower integrated graphics of the previous-generation Intel chip and could certainly use some power efficiency and longer battery life.

The 15-inch MacBook Pro escapes the graphics issue by incorporating a discrete graphics processor that provides some oomph when it's needed (say, running games, Photoshop or even Flash content), but it's been too long since the last update.

Apple's Retina Display-equipped MacBook Pros are also sorely in need of an update. They were last bumped in February, after being introduced in October 2012, but they're still hampered by slower, less efficient technology. Rene and I both have noticed that our 15-inch MacBook Pros with Retina Displays are particularly awful when relying on their integrated graphics; a 40 percent boost in graphics performance would be welcome there.

And we haven't even gotten to the other innovations present in the MacBook Air, like 802.11ac Wi-Fi support and PCIe-based Flash storage. All told, it's very, very hard to justify a MacBook Pro purchase before Apple overhauls the line with new processors and other enhancements.

The desktop dilemma

While it's Apple's least expensive machine, the Mac mini doesn't usually skimp on features. Apple's able to keep costs low by using a common component base for the Mac mini - it uses many of the same parts you'll find inside Apple's MacBook line. So I expect that once the MacBook Pro line gets the Haswell treatment, the Mac mini will follow shortly thereafter. At least if it doesn't, it's safe to guess that it's a marketing decision on Apple's part, not an engineering problem.

Mac mini

Both the Mac mini and the iMac were last updated in October of 2012 (though the 21.5-inch iMac got a mid-stream refresh with a faster high-end option earlier this year). Apple tracks a more-or-less annual upgrade cycle with those systems; sometimes they'll come out in the summer, sometime in the fall, but eventually they'll come.

But apart from 3D graphics improvements, computationally, Haswell microprocessors don't do much to differentiate themselves from their third-generation Intel Core counterparts. The Mac mini relies on integrated graphics, so a Haswell boost will help there. But the iMac uses discrete graphics, and Haswell's power efficiency is largely a non-issue for either desktop model.

Apple's going to incorporate faster Wi-Fi into its next desktop systems, for sure, but what else will it do? I don't see a major redesign of the iMac in the cards any time soon, especially after Apple's trouble with the last major redesign last fall, which caused enormous production problems as Apple's manufacturers struggled to get the display panels right.

Waiting is the hardest part

It's inevitable that new computers are going to come out, so you'll always benefit from waiting until there's a system that meets your needs. Some people don't have that luxury and will have to buy sooner, because they need a system for work or school or because they're replacing a computer that's just bit the dust, or for a million other reasons.

But right now, if you're in the market for a Mac laptop, it's worth taking a second or even third look at the MacBook Air even if you've ruled it out, because the MacBook Air is the sweet spot in Apple's product line between price, performance and efficiency.

Otherwise, bide your time and wait for Apple to make the Haswell jump. It'll be worth it.

Are you waiting for Apple to replace its current MacBook Pro and desktop lineup with Haswell-based systems? Or is it not that important to you? Let me know in the comments.

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/Q8sFPwpCXKU/story01.htm

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[video] ubuntu for android in action (not ubuntu touch!)

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With all the news about the Ubuntu Edge and Canonical's plans for Ubuntu Touch to be the future of convergent computing, you may have forgotten that Canonical is still working on Ubuntu for Android. Ubuntu for Android is essentially the same idea as Ubuntu Touch, where you get a full Ubuntu desktop environment when you dock a mobile device, but with the difference that the handset runs Android, not Ubuntu Touch.

Canonical engineer Victor Palau is showing off Ubuntu for Android running through a Nexus 4, which is hooked up to an external monitor via a Slimport HDMI cable. As you can see in the video, it does give access to full Ubuntu, complete with workspaces, and the Ubuntu Software Centre. But, as you can also see, the Nexus 4 struggles with the system. Windows stutter when moving, and overall performance is slow.

This could very well be partially due to the system not being optimized properly for the hardware in a Nexus 4, but part of it could simply be that the Nexus 4 isn't powerful enough. The Ubuntu Edge is planned to have the "fastest available" processor and "at least 4GB of RAM", while the Nexus 4 has a year old Snapdragon S4 Pro and just 2GB of RAM. Now we can see that "convergence hump" that Mark Shuttleworth talked about yesterday.


Source:
Phonearena & OMG!Ubuntu!

Source: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2379614&goto=newpost

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Florida man dies in Alaska accident

A 25-year-old Florida man has died in an all-terrain vehicle crash in Alaska.

Bethel police identified the victim in the Thursday accident as Troy David Deloach. His hometown wasn't immediately available.

KYUK reports (http://is.gd/6UQdgf) his four-wheeler crashed on Standard Oil Road near the boat launch.

Police and medics took him to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

Bethel, a community of about 6,200 residents, is located 400 miles west of Anchorage.

Source: http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/07/26/3522829/florida-man-dies-in-alaska-accident.html

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The "Hey Sucker, You'll Never Ever Make Partner" Gabfest

Become a fan of the Political Gabfest on Facebook. We post to the Facebook page throughout the week, so keep the conversation going by joining us there. Or follow us @SlateGabfest!

To listen to the discussion, use the player below:

On this week?s Slate Political Gabfest, John Dickerson, Emily Bazelon, and David Plotz discuss New York mayoral candidate Anthony Weiner?s sexting problem, again. They also talk about the early moves toward another budget and debt ceiling showdown and a New Republic piece about challenges confronting large corporate law firms.

Here are some of the links and references mentioned during this week's show:

Topic ideas for next week? You can tweet suggestions, links, and questions to @SlateGabfest. The email address for the Political Gabfest is gabfest@slate.com. (Email may be quoted by name unless the writer stipulates otherwise.)

Podcast production by Mike Vuolo. Links compiled by Jeff Friedrich.

Source: http://www.slate.com/articles/podcasts/gabfest/2013/07/the_gabfest_more_weiner_sexting_the_next_debt_ceiling_standoff_and_the_end.html

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Good Cop, Bad Cop: Comparing the Law of Police Interrogations in Canada and Japan

One interesting scrap of legal news that passed under the radar recently was a testy exchange involving Hideaki Ueda, Japan?s human rights envoy to the United Nations at a session of the UN torture committee in Geneva, Switzerland. The donnybrook arose when a fellow envoy called-out the Japanese criminal system for not mandating electronic recording or the presence of counsel at police interrogations. Mr. Ueda sprang to his nation?s defence, only to be met by the audience?s muffled laughter. In true diplomatic fashion, Japan?s emissary responded by telling his esteemed colleagues to ?shut up? not once, but twice.

At first glance, Japanese procedure regarding the recording of police interrogations shouldn?t be that shocking to Canadian lawyers. Like our Japanese friends, Canada doesn?t require that interviews be videotaped or that defence counsel be present.[1] That said, the Japanese context is somewhat different in that the police over there seem a little more fixated on scoring confessions than adhering to any pesky constitutional limits.

That the Japanese authorities refer to an accused?s confession as ?the King of Evidence? should give you some insight into how they roll. Japanese police have been in the spotlight over the past decade for reaching an altogether new standard in ?robust? interview methods that reportedly include physical abuse, sleep deprivation, threats, isolation and marathon sessions.[2] In fact, Amnesty International cites the Japanese justice system?s propensity for ?torture and ill-treatment? to procure confessions as an ongoing concern. In one 2007 case, a court in Saga prefecture acquitted a man who confessed to three murders following seventeen days of ten hour-plus grilling by the local constabulary. More recently, a hacker was apprehended and subsequently convicted of making threats over the internet, but not before police had managed to extract four separate confessions from four different individuals for the exact same crime. In an interesting twist, the real perpetrator cited their reason for making the threats as a way ?to expose the police and prosecutors? abomination.?

Comparatively speaking, Canada appears to be a veritable nanny state. In this country, the rule relating to the evidentiary admissibility of confessions is rooted in centuries of common law, and holds that any confession made by an accused to an authority figure outside the courtroom is inadmissible unless the prosecution can illustrate beyond a reasonable doubt that the confession was made voluntarily. This was reaffirmed most recently by the Supreme Court of Canada in R. v. Oickle, which revisited the rule precisely because of growing judicial cognizance of aggressive interrogations and the false confessions they can engender.[3]

Japanese authorities however appear quite blas? about the whole phenomenon. In fact, they?re aided in their Bronson-esque investigative methods by a legal system that essentially puts suspects at their mercy. A suspect can be held for up to three days by police and prosecutors before he or she sees the inside of a court room. Moreover, police and prosecutors frequently work together to avail themselves of the daiyo kangoku, or ?substitute prison? procedure which permits a suspect to be detained for a further 23 days without charge. This extended period of incarceration must be approved and then renewed every 10 days by a judge ? something that happens 99.77% of the time according to official government statistics.[4] Contrast this with Canada?s ?soft on crime? approach which mandates that according to Section 503(1)(a) of the Canadian Criminal Code, an accused must be brought before a Justice of the Peace within 24 hours to determine if they will be released or remanded into custody.

The Japanese are also not too hot about having suspects talk to their lawyers. While Articles 34 and 37(2) of the Japanese Constitution purportedly enshrine the accused?s right to counsel, Article 39 of the Japanese Code of Criminal Procedure eviscerates this principle by permitting authorities to control the timing and duration of these consultations if it would ?interfere with the ongoing investigation?.[5] In contrast, the Supreme Court of Canada has been a little more protective of an accused's rights. In R. v. Suberu, the Court interpreted Section 10(b) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms: ?everyone has the right upon detention to retain and instruct counsel without delay and to be informed of that right?, to mean that a detained suspect is entitled to speak to a lawyer ?immediately? upon their detention and that the police have a duty to facilitate the process.[6]

So, how do these two legal systems stack-up? The stats are telling ? while the Japanese might be loose cannons, dammit, they get results. With a commendably efficient conviction rate of 99.7%, Japanese police and prosecutors make their Canadian brethren look like black sheep living in their parents? basement ? the latter checking-in with a paltry 64% success-rate as of 2011.

Given that Japan strove to fashion itself as a western-style liberal democracy in the decades following World War Two, the authorities? prevailing tactics and attitudes are particularly perplexing. For example, Chapter Three of the Japanese Constitution offers broad protections to the criminally accused that bear striking resemblance to those enshrined in the U.S. constitution, and so would be recognizable to any Canadian who has watched an episode of Law and Order. The similarity is unsurprising: the Japanese document was drafted with heavy American involvement following Tokyo?s defeat in World War Two. Specifically, Articles 36 and 38 of the Japanese Constitution explicitly prohibit the use of torture by police as well as self-incrimination and compelled confessions.[7]

So how did the islands that gave us Hello Kitty and astonishingly jovial Blue Jays? shortstop Munenori Kawasaki also manage to create a criminal justice system that?s presumptively modeled on an episode of The Shield? The answer has something to do with the difference between legal codification and legal culture. In 1890 Japan introduced a constitution that provided for the rule of law through representative government, separation of powers and the protection of civil liberties. One important, nagging carve-out however, was that the Emperor retained absolute power over the country. While the Emperor is only a figurehead these days, police and prosecutors have since done their best to take up his mantle as ?heavenly sovereign? when it comes to assigning guilt. The result is that Japan?s Thin Blue Line apparently sees its Constitution not so much as a set of codified, unalienable rights, as an inconvenient guideline that hinders them from putting no-good punks behind bars.[8]

In fact, some of the policy rationales used to justify business-as-usual in Japan would strike Canadian observers as bizarre inversions of how a justice system should work. While Japan?s law talks about a presumption of innocence, observers have noted a de facto onus on defendants to prove their innocence at trial. [9] Moreover, there is no requirement that authorities reveal exculpatory evidence, increasing the risk of false convictions. [10] When the debate over recording of police interrogations erupted in the early 2000s, police justified their opposition on the grounds that suspects would be less likely to confess. Too true.

And historically-speaking, Japanese society hasn?t seemed to mind the state?s general aversion to protecting their constitutional rights. The theories explaining this cognitive dissonance are broad and varied, ranging from Japan?s history as a civil law system, to its cultural tendency towards deference to authority, to its general attitudes towards crime and punishment, to straight-up bureaucratic and judicial inertia.[11]

But, before we Canadians get too smug about the splendour of our own criminal justice regime, it should be noted that Canadian police aren?t exactly paragons of virtue when it comes to making suspects talk. Cops in Canada have repeatedly been taken to task by judges for their aggressive use of interview methods such as the ?Reid technique?, which have been found in some cases to produce false confessions. In the Reid scenario, an interviewing officer will subject the accused to lengthy questioning, repeated interruptions and constant assertions of guilt in the hope of garnering an admission of guilt. In R. v. Chapple, an Alberta court was scathing in its appraisal of the Calgary police service?s methods when it ruled that a defendant?s confession was inadmissible as evidence on the grounds that the Reid technique had been employed in an oppressive way:

I denounce the use of this technique in the strongest terms possible and find that its use can lead to overwhelmingly oppressive situations that can render false confessions and cause innocent people to be wrongfully imprisoned. In this case, the police were convinced of the accused's guilt even though there was medical evidence available that was consistent with the accused's version of events. They pushed ahead with the interview with one goal in mind: a confession.

Moreover, before one criticizes the underlying assumptions and mores of Japanese legal philosophy, it also bears mentioning that Japan is home to far lower per capita incarceration and recidivism rates than most developed nations. The moral of the story is that while helpful, recording interrogations is by no means a cure-all for police excess. Instead, what?s required is broad, societal commitment to the presumption of innocence and a transparent justice system ? and it?s here where Japan has traditionally been M.I.A.

All of which brings us back to the travails of the hapless Mr. Ueda. While the use of video recording has expanded in police and prosecutorial interrogations over the past decade, practical problems remain evident. Electronic documenting of police interrogations in Japan began in 2006, and this year it was proudly proclaimed that 97% of interviews relating to ?major? crimes were taped. In absolute numbers however, this amounted to a mere 67 cases in a nation of approximately 130 million people. Prosecutors have also jumped on the VHS bandwagon, though a majority of prosecutorial examinations still aren?t taped. As of June 2013, recordings are only mandated for certain serious offences, and even then, police and prosecutors have the final say on what portions of their interviews actually get recorded.

But times in Japan may well be a-changin?. The Japanese Federation of Bar Associations has been outspoken in its efforts to reform the law, and there is increasing public outcry over highly-publicized examples of police and prosecutorial misconduct. [12] The authorities appear to be listening. In 2009 Japan instituted the jury-style ?Saibanin? system for serious crimes in an effort to make legal proceedings more transparent.[13] This shift marked the first time in the postwar era that Japanese citizens had a participatory role in court proceedings. [14] More recently, the widespread shock expressed in the Japanese media following Mr. Ueda?s outburst in Geneva suggests that popular attitudes towards suspects? rights may be evolving. With this development comes the realization that the sun might indeed be setting on a truly badass era in the history of Japanese policing.

Despite the differences between the laws of our two great nations, Japanese cops have clearly taken at least one cue from the Canadian experience. Foremost, they appear to have directly cribbed the Mounties? old adage ?we always get our man? though, in true Japanese style, they?ve adapted it to suit their own sensibilities: while the RCMP sees the motto as more of a loose aspirational goal, Japanese cops mean it. I mean, they really mean it.

Mark Donald is a member of the Ontario bar.?


[1] R. v. Sinclair, [2010] 2 S.C.R. 310, 77 C.R. (6th) 203 at paras. 2, 33-42, 46. See also The Path to Justice: Preventing Wrongful Convictions, Public Prosecution Service of Canada (2011), chapter 6: False Confessions, online: http://www.ppsc-sppc.gc.ca/eng/pub/ptj-spj/ch6.html. For a more in-depth discussion of Canadian law pertaining to police interrogations and suspects? rights, see Lisa Dufraimont, The Interrogation Trilogy and the Protections for Interrogated Suspects in Canadian Law, (2011), S.C.L.R. (2d) at 309.

[2] Arne F. Soldwedel, Testing Japan?s Convictions: The Lay Judge System and the Rights of Criminal Defendants, 41 Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law 1417 at 1433 [Soldwedel].

[3] R. v. Oickle, [2000] 2 S.C.R. 3, 147 C.C.C. (3d) 321 at para. 32.

[5] Soldwedel, Supra note 2 at 1435.

[6] R. v. Suberu, 2009 SCC 33 at para. 42.

[7] Soldwedel, Supra note 2 at 1432.

[8] Soldwedel, Supra note 4 at 1428.

[10] Ito, Supra note 10 at 380-381.

[11] Soldwedel, Supra note 5 at 1427-30. See also Ito, Supra note 18.

[12] Ito, Supra note 10 at 384-385.

[13] Soldwedel, Supra note 4 at 1420.

[14] Ito, Supra note 10 at 370.

Source: http://www.slaw.ca/2013/07/25/good-cop-bad-cop-comparing-the-law-of-police-interrogations-in-canada-and-japan/

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