Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Apple trademarks new FaceTime logo, settles on green

Apple trademarks new FaceTime logo, settles on green

There's certainly been a lot of brouhaha surrounding the new design language Apple introduced for iOS 7 at WWDC. Some (ourselves included) feel it's modern and fresh while others loathe the brighter palette and simpler, flatter icons. A lot can change between now and the launch of iOS 7 this fall, but if Apple's recent trademark filing is any indication, FaceTime's new logo / icon -- which consists of a stylized white video camera inside a rounded-off green square -- fits squarely (ahem) within the aesthetic we saw on stage in San Francisco. Of course, companies often trademark logos, so we can't really say this comes as much of a surprise, either. If you're curious where Jony Ive might have found his inspiration for the pastel colors and thin lines showcased in iOS 7's iconography, check out Otl Aicher's design work for the 1972 Olympics in the "more coverage" link after the break.

Filed under: , ,

Comments

Source: Patently Apple

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/1tUqarQikCg/

king arthur there will be blood there will be blood nigel barker secret service fenway park philadelphia flyers

Monday, July 1, 2013

Brian Brown: Same-sex marriage not inevitable nationally

When asked whether same-sex marriage bans across the country will eventually be struck down following the landmark Supreme Court decisions on same-sex marriage, National Organization for Marriage President Brian Brown told ABC News' George Stephanopoulos, that he didn't think that it would be " inevitable."

Despite this week's rulings, which declared part of the Defense of Marriage Act unconstitutional and dismissed an appeal made by supporters of Proposition 8 banning same-sex marriage in California, Brown downplayed the victories claimed by gay marriage supporters, saying that the Court did not establish a constitutional right to same-sex marriage in Hollingsworth v. Perry , the case that considered the California ban passed in 2008.

"The court said, well, the proponents don't have standing. It did not say that there was a constitutional right to redefine marriage," Brown said on "This Week" Sunday.

ABC brian brown this week jt 130630 33x16 608 Brian Brown: Same Sex Marriage Not Inevitable NationallyBrown

President of the Human Rights Campaign Chad Griffin also joined "This Week" and said he's prepared to continue to "fight this battle on all fronts," through referenda, state legislation and federal court cases to expand same-sex marriage rights further.

Brown said the precedent set in California, where state officials refused to defend Proposition 8 - a law passed by popular referendum - is "horrific for our republic."

"If the governor and attorney general don't to want defend that law, you've just gutted the initiative and referendum process. This is not an American value," Brown said.

Brown called Justice Anthony Kennedy's majority decision in the DOMA case an "absolute travesty" and "incoherent."

He added that Justice Kennedy "says something that is patently untrue," that a person who believes "this truth, that marriage is the union of a man and a woman is somehow motivated by animus and discrimination."

Such an assumption, Brown said, "leads to discrimination against those of us who know that there's something unique and special about husbands and wives, mothers and fathers coming together in marriage."

"There will be a lot of attempts to use this decision to redefine marriage in other states. And we will stand for the truth wherever it is," Brown said.

Griffin, an advocate of gay marriage whose wins this week prompted congratulatory calls from President Obama and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, spoke of the broader status of same-sex marriage across the United States.

"At the same time while we celebrate, we have to acknowledge that there are 37 states in this country that still don't have equality," Griffin said.

Asked if he thought gay marriage supporters will win victories to expand same-sex marriage to other states, Griffin said, "I have all expectation that we will."

Griffin pointed to the history of social movements to predict the outcome of the same-sex marriage debate.

"This country has always moved historically - whether it was women's rights, or the Civil Rights Movement of the 50's and 60's to today - we have always moved to greater inclusion and treating all of our citizens equally under the law," Griffin said.

"We're well on our way. We're not there yet, but we're well on our way," he added.

Like "This Week" on Facebook here . You can also follow the show on Twitter here .

Go here to find out when "This Week" is on in your area.

Also Read

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/brian-brown-same-sex-marriage-not-inevitable-nationally-182042402--abc-news-topstories.html

michael bay ninja turtles san antonio weather mike daisey nicollette sheridan apple dividend snow white and the huntsman snow white and the huntsman

Ecuador president: Snowden can't leave Moscow

Ecuador's President Rafael Correa, speaks during a interview with The Associated Press in Portoviejo, Ecuador, Sunday, June 30, 2013. Correa said he had no idea Snowden?s intended destination was Ecuador when he fled Hong Kong for Russia last week. He said the Ecuadorean consul in London committed ?a serious error? without consulting any officials in the capital, Quito, when the consul issued a letter of safe passage for Snowden.(AP Photo/Martin Mejia)

Ecuador's President Rafael Correa, speaks during a interview with The Associated Press in Portoviejo, Ecuador, Sunday, June 30, 2013. Correa said he had no idea Snowden?s intended destination was Ecuador when he fled Hong Kong for Russia last week. He said the Ecuadorean consul in London committed ?a serious error? without consulting any officials in the capital, Quito, when the consul issued a letter of safe passage for Snowden.(AP Photo/Martin Mejia)

Ecuador's President Rafael Correa, center, jokes as he prepares before an interview with The Associated Press in Portoviejo, Ecuador, Sunday, June 30, 2013. Correa said he had no idea Snowden?s intended destination was Ecuador when he fled Hong Kong for Russia last week. He said the Ecuadorean consul in London committed ?a serious error? without consulting any officials in the capital, Quito, when the consul issued a letter of safe passage for Snowden. At left AP reporter Michael Weinssenstein, at right Gonzalo Solano. (AP Photo/Martin Mejia)

Ecuador's President Rafael Correa, laughs during a interview with The Associated Press in Portoviejo, Ecuador, Sunday, June 30, 2013. Correa said he had no idea Snowden?s intended destination was Ecuador when he fled Hong Kong for Russia last week. He said the Ecuadorean consul in London committed ?a serious error? without consulting any officials in the capital, Quito, when the consul issued a letter of safe passage for Snowden.(AP Photo/Martin Mejia)

Ecuador's President Rafael Correa, speaks during a interview with The Associated Press in Portoviejo, Ecuador, Sunday, June 30, 2013. Correa said he had no idea Snowden?s intended destination was Ecuador when he fled Hong Kong for Russia last week. He said the Ecuadorean consul in London committed ?a serious error? without consulting any officials in the capital, Quito, when the consul issued a letter of safe passage for Snowden. (AP Photo/Martin Mejia)

Ecuador's President Rafael Correa sings during his weekly live broadcast "Enlace Ciudadano," or "Citizen Link," in Manta, Ecuador, Saturday, June 29, 2013. While the Ecuadorean government appeared angry over U.S. threats of punishment if it accepts U.S. National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden, there were also mixed signals about how eager it was to grant asylum. (AP Photo/Martin Mejia)

PORTOVIEJO, Ecuador (AP) ? Edward Snowden is "under the care of the Russian authorities" and can't leave Moscow's international airport without their consent, Ecuadorean President Rafael Correa told The Associated Press Sunday in an interview telegraphing the slim and diminishing possibility that the National Security Agency leaker will end up in Ecuador.

Correa portrayed Russia as entirely the master of Snowden's fate and said Ecuador is still awaiting an asylum request from Snowden before deciding its next moves.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has distanced himself from the case since Snowden arrived in Moscow last week, insisting the 30-year-old former NSA contractor remains in the transit zone of the capital's Sheremetyevo Airport and that as long as he has not legally entered Russia, he is out of the Kremlin's control.

At the same time, the Kremlin said Sunday that it will take public opinion and the views of human rights activists into account when considering Snowden's case, a move that could lay the groundwork for him to seek asylum in Russia.

"This is the decision of Russian authorities," Correa told the AP during a visit to this Pacific coast city. "He doesn't have a passport. I don't know the Russian laws, I don't know if he can leave the airport, but I understand that he can't. At this moment he's under the care of the Russian authorities. If he arrives at an Ecuadorean Embassy we'll analyze his request for asylum."

Last week, several members of Russia's Presidential Council for Human Rights spoke out in support of Snowden, saying he deserved to receive political asylum in the country of his choice and should not be handed over to the United States. And a handful of protesters picketed outside the Moscow airport in what appeared to be an orchestrated demonstration on Friday, holding signs reading "Edward, Russia is your second motherland" and "Russia is behind Snowden."

Putin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told Ekho Moskvy radio that while Snowden is not Russia's concern, the Kremlin is aware of the viewpoints of Russian experts and representatives of human rights organizations.

"Public opinion on the subject is very rich," Peskov said in the radio interview. "We are aware of this and are taking it into account."

Correa said he had no idea Snowden's intended destination was Ecuador when he fled Hong Kong for Russia last week. He said the Ecuadorean consul in London committed "a serious error" by not consulting officials in Ecuador's capital when the consul issued a letter of safe passage for Snowden. He said the consul would be punished, although he didn't specify how.

Analysts familiar with the workings of the Ecuadorean government said Correa's claims that the decision was entirely Russia's appeared to be at least partly disingenuous. They said they believed Correa's administration at first intended to host Snowden, then started back-tracking this week when the possible consequences became clearer.

"I think the government started to realize the dimensions of what it was getting itself into, how it was managing things and the consequences that this could bring," said Santiago Basabe, an analyst and professor of political sciences at the Latin American School of Social Sciences in the Ecuadorean capital, Quito. "So it started pulling back, and they'll never tell us why, but I think the alarm bells started to go off from people very close to the government, maybe Ecuador's ambassador in Washington warned them about the consequences of asylum for Snowden."

Correa said Snowden must assume responsibility if he broke U.S. laws, but added the broader legitimacy of Snowden's action must be taken into consideration. He said Ecuador would still consider an asylum request but only if Snowden is able to make it to Ecuador or an Ecuadorean Embassy to apply.

The U.S. is seeking the former NSA contractor's extradition for leaking secret documents that, among other things, detail U.S. surveillance of international online activity. On Sunday, German magazine Der Spiegel reported that classified documents taken by Snowden also revealed U.S. spies had allegedly bugged European Union offices.

Correa never entirely closed the door to Snowden, whom he said had drawn vital attention to the U.S. eavesdropping program and potential violations of human rights. But Correa appeared to be sending the message that it is unlikely Snowden will ever end up in Ecuador. He repeatedly emphasized the importance of the U.S. legal process and praised Vice President Joe Biden for what he described as a courteous and appreciated half-hour call about the Snowden case on Friday.

He similarly declined to reject an important set of U.S. trade benefits for Ecuadorean exports, again a contrast with his government's unilateral renunciation of a separate set of tariff benefits earlier in the week.

"If he really could have broken North American laws, I am very respectful of other countries and their laws and I believe that someone who breaks the law must assume his responsibilities," Correa said. "But we also believe in human rights and due process."

He said Biden had asked him to send Snowden back to the United States immediately because he faces criminal charges, is a fugitive from justice and has had his passport revoked.

"I told him that we would analyze his opinion, which is very important to us," Correa said, adding that he had demanded the return of several Ecuadoreans who are in the United States but face criminal charges at home.

"I greatly appreciated the call," he said, contrasting it with threats made by a small group of U.S. senators to revoke Ecuadorean trade privileges. "When I received the call from Vice President Biden, which was with great cordiality and a different vision, we really welcomed it a lot."

Ecuadorean officials believe Russian authorities stymied the country's efforts to approve a political asylum application from the former NSA systems analyst, according to government officials with direct knowledge of the case.

Those officials said Ecuador had been making detailed plans to receive and host Snowden. One of the officials said Russia's refusal to let Snowden leave or be picked up by Ecuadorean officials had thwarted the plans. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren't authorized to discuss the case by name.

One of the officials said Snowden had intended to travel from Moscow to the Ecuadorean capital of Quito. The official said Ecuador had also asked Russia to let Snowden take a commercial flight to meet Foreign Minister Ricardo Patino in Vietnam or Singapore, where Patino was on an official trip.

The Russians rejected all of Ecuador's requests to let Snowden leave Moscow, or to let an Ecuadorean government plane pick him up there, the official said.

Asked Sunday about those accounts, Correa responded, without elaborating, "We don't have long-range aircraft. It's a joke."

Snowden's path to Ecuador would have gone through Cuba, which said little about the case all week, including whether it would have allowed him to use its territory to transit.

Cuban leader Fidel Castro praised Correa's rejection of U.S. trade pressure, expressing his "sympathies" for the Ecuadorean leader in a Sunday editorial in the state press.

_______ Gonzalo Solano contributed from Quito, Ecuador. Lynn Berry in Moscow contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-06-30-NSA-Surveillance-Interview-Correa/id-f20ef6c5f40d42b0b1918345e0d8b744

washington redskins Carly Rae Jepsen Rose Bowl 2013 anderson cooper adrian peterson chicago bears netflix

City Parks & Rec offers sports and holiday festivities | Business ...


Clrksvlparks&rec-topspot-color logo_image001The Clarksvelle Department of Parks and Recreation issues its weekly events report with Independence Day celebration events and special sports opportunities for youngsters of all ages.

?

Free Sports Tournaments ?

Get out on the court and show everyone what you?ve got!? Free 5-on-5 basketball and 7-on-7 flag football tournaments will be held as part of the Mayor?s Summer Night Lights program!? These sports tournaments are open to ages 11-14, 15-17, and 18 and up.? Those wanting to play must be at the location no later than 5:45 p.m. to sign up.? Free food and drinks will be provided!

sports balls on grass - horizontal

Basketball tournaments will be held at Bel-Aire Park, Summit Heights and the Kleeman Center.? Teams must have five players. The schedule of basketball is as follows:

  • Bel-Aire Park ? June 24
  • Kleeman Center ? July 1
  • Summit Heights ? July 3
  • Bel-Aire Park ? July 8
  • Kleeman Center ? July 15
  • Summit Heights ? July 17
  • Bel-Aire Park ? July 22
  • Kleeman Center ? July 29
  • Summit Heights ? July 31
  • Bel-Aire Park ? August 5

?

Flag football tournaments will be held at Pettus Park.? Teams must have seven players.? Tournaments will be:

  • June 26
  • July 10
  • July 24
  • August? 7

DoggiePalooza2010The 6th Annual Doggie Palooza will be held June 29 after being previously rained out. This free event is from 1 to 4 p.m., at the Heritage Park Bark Park. Bring your pooch for a day full of demonstrations, contests, prizes and more!

?

Independence Day Celebration

Join your friends and neighbors? as Clarksville celebrates our nation?s independence with the 6th annual Independence Day
Lighting Up The Cumberland Fireworks-16Celebration at a new location!?Enjoy the festivities on Wednesday, July 3, at Liberty Park offering food, fun and entertainment for the entire family.? Activities begin at 6 p.m. and will include performances by local bands Brio and The Beagles and will
conclude with the city?s largest fireworks display starting at 9:30 p.m.!

?

Guests are encouraged to park at the 7-acre grass area adjacent to the park, or at the old Josten?s building, located at 1312 Hwy 48/13. Clarksville Transit System will provide free rides to and from the parking areas beginning at 4 p.m. with the last bus departing from Liberty Park at 10:30 p.m.

Wonder Kids Triathlon

Don?t miss the first-ever Wonder Kids Triathlon, presented by Jack in the Box, to be held August 3!? This event is open to boys and girls ages 3-12 and will take place at the New Providence Pool and surrounding property.

junior_triathlon_05Wonder Kids Triathlon participants will participate in three legs of the event, swimming, biking and running.? Courses vary depending on age:

  • 3-5Yrs: 25m Swim, 300yd Bike, 100yd Run
  • 6-8Yrs:?50m Swim, 600yd Bike, 300yd Run
  • 9-12Yrs: 100m Swim, 1mile Bike, 1/2mile Run

All floatation devices must be Coast Guard approved.

Cost is $25 per child and pre-registration is required with a limit of 100 participants in this year?s event so register early!? Cost covers t-shirt, medal, swim cap and goodie bag.? Registration can be completed at recpro.cityofclarksville.com, at our Community Centers or Main Office, no later than July 29.? Register by July 12 to guarantee correct shirt and swim cap size.

?

?

Source: http://businessclarksville.com/news/city-parks-rec-offers-sports-and-holiday-festivities/2013/06/29/51963

Jon Lord Colorado shootings dark knight rises Aurora shooting James Eagan Holmes jeremy lin Sage Stallone

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Petition to Pardon Snowden to Receive White House Response (ABC News)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/314927896?client_source=feed&format=rss

christina hendricks camp david hawaii weather the jerk lake havasu halo 4 jewel

Syrian rebels renew fight for Aleppo

By Khaled Yacoub Oweis

AMMAN (Reuters) - Syrian rebels battled President Bashar al-Assad's forces in and around the northern city of Aleppo on Sunday, seeking to reverse gains made by loyalist forces in the commercial hub over the last two months, activists said.

The fighting, by a variety of insurgent groups, happened as France urged moderate rebels to wrest territory back from radical Islamists whose role in the fight to topple Assad poses a dilemma for Western countries concerned that arms shipments could fall into the hands of people it considers terrorists.

The 11 Western and Arab countries known as the "Friends of Syria" agreed on Saturday to give urgent military support to the rebels, channeled through the Western-backed Supreme Military Council in a bid to prevent arms getting to Islamist radicals.

But radical forces showed they remained formidable on Sunday when the Islamist Ahrar al-Sham brigade detonated a car bomb at a roadblock at an entrance to Aleppo killing at least 12 loyalist soldiers, according to the opposition Aleppo News Network and other activists in the city.

Aleppo, 35 km (20 miles) south of Turkey, has been contested since July last year, when rebel brigades entered the city and captured about half of it. In recent weeks, Assad has focused his military campaign on recapturing rebel-held areas.

He has also been expanding control of the central province of Homs after capturing a strategic town on the border with Lebanon, and has used heavy bombardment and siege warfare to contain rebels dug in around the capital, according to opposition sources and diplomats monitoring the conflict.

Firas Fuleifel, with the moderate Islamist al-Farouq Brigade, said six rebel fighters were killed in fighting in Aleppo in the last day.

WIN BACK CONTROL

French President Francois Hollande, whose country has been at the forefront of Western efforts to re-organize and back the opposition, said moderate rebels must take territory held by radical Islamists whose involvement in the conflict, he said, gives Bashar al-Assad a pretext for more violence.

"The opposition needs to win back control of these areas ... they have fallen into the hands of extremists," Hollande told a news conference in the Doha a day after the Friends of Syria met in the Qatari capital.

"If it seems that extremist groups are present and tomorrow they could be the beneficiaries of a chaotic situation, it will be Bashar al-Assad who will seize on this pretext to continue the massacre," Hollande said.

In Damascus, the Ahrar al-Sham and the Islamist Tawhid al-Asima brigades detonated a car bomb in an area known as Mezze 86, inhabited by members of Assad's Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shi'ite Islam that has controlled Syria since the 1960s. Two people were killed, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group said.

Rebels also attacked two security compounds in Damascus, killing at least five people, sources in the capital said.

In regional repercussions of the increasingly sectarian Syrian conflict, four Lebanese soldiers were killed in clashes with followers of a Sunni Islamist cleric who is a critic of the role of Hezbollah - the Shi'ite Lebanese group - in giving military support to Assad.

Sources in the city said the fighting broke out when a follower of Sheikh Ahmed al-Assir was arrested at an army roadblock in Sidon, 40 km (28 miles) south of Beirut.

The clashes were followed by fighting between Hezbollah members based in the mostly Sunni city and Assir's followers in which automatic weapons and shoulder fired rockets were used, the sources said.

(Additional reporting by Laila Bassam in Beirut and Yara Bayoumy in Doha; Editing by Robin Pomeroy and Kevin Liffey)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/syrian-rebels-renew-fight-aleppo-104545195.html

nike new nfl uniforms nfl uniforms andrew bailey the village dallas fort worth tornado dallas tornadoes dallas weather

Humanities on the chopping block (CNN)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, RSS and RSS Feed via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/314968452?client_source=feed&format=rss

terrell owens terrell owens neil armstrong little league world series us open tennis us open tennis Empire State Building shooting

Monday, June 17, 2013

Happy Father's Day: Dad's chores worth less than Mom's

Happy Father's Day vs. Happy's Mother's Day? The latter gets far more attention, but there may be a reason: Dad's work around the house isn't even worth half that of his spouse, according to a recent survey for Father's Day.?

By Schuyler Velasco,?Staff writer / June 16, 2013

A model grills a steak at his Fort Worth, Texas, home. A new Father's Day survey calculating the value of the typical household chores done by fathers, like grilling, found that Dad's chore value went up in 2013. But it's still far below the value of housework done by Mom.

Ralph Lauer/AP/File

Enlarge

Father?s Day is the runt of the gift-giving holiday litter. Americans are expected to spend a combined $13.3 billion on Dad for Father?s Day in 2013, far less than they spent on the Christmas holidays ($580 billion), Valentine?s Day ($18 billion), and Mother?s Day ($20.7 billion), according to the National Retail Federation.

Skip to next paragraph

' + google_ads[0].line2 + '
' + google_ads[0].line3 + '

'; } else if (google_ads.length > 1) { ad_unit += ''; } } document.getElementById("ad_unit").innerHTML += ad_unit; google_adnum += google_ads.length; return; } var google_adnum = 0; google_ad_client = "pub-6743622525202572"; google_ad_output = 'js'; google_max_num_ads = '1'; google_feedback = "on"; google_ad_type = "text"; // google_adtest = "on"; google_image_size = '230x105'; google_skip = '0'; // -->

There are plenty of reasons Father?s Day gets short shrift. Dads are difficult to shop for. They?re picky about gifts. The gifts they want are often prohibitively expensive. ?In the rare event you find an affordable, easy-to-find gift that Dad actually wants, he?ll usually buy it for himself before informing you.

But there might be another reason: According to a recent survey, Dad?s household chores are less valuable than Mom?s. By a lot.

Insure.com, a consumer insurance information site, puts out an annual Father?s Day Index that calculates the monetary value of the work the typical father does around the house, using Labor Department wage statistics for jobs that correlate to typical "dad" chores. Home repairs, for example, are calculated using wage data for maintenance and repair workers. Removing spiders from the house and squishing bugs correlates to pest control; driving kids to school and extra-curricular activities to chauffeurs, etc.

This year, the Father?s Day Index put Dad?s chore value at $23,344, an increase from last year?s $20,248. The 2013 value for moms, using the same methodology, is $59,862 ? over twice as much. Mom?s household value has been dropping for the past few years. So perhaps household labor is beginning to become more equally shared.

The survey should be taken lightly: Much of the value jump on the Dad end, after all, can be attributed to hourly wage increases for drivers, teachers, and plumbers in 2013. But it is yet another indication that the division of household labor and career obligations are shaking out more evenly between mothers and fathers. A Pew Research Center study released this past spring found that fathers are devoting more hours than ever to child care and housework: an average of 17 hours per week in 2011 compared with 6.5 hours in 1965.

Mothers, predictably, are spending more weekly hours on paid work than they were in 1965. And the mother is now the sole or primary breadwinner in 4 in 10 American families, according to Pew, quadrupling the 1960 rate.

All of this is great news, but it might not hurt to dote on the nation?s approximately 70 million dads a little extra this year as we inch toward gender equality. To do so, stop by and get a gift at one of the 7,368 men?s clothing stores, 15,542 hardware stores, or 21,418 sporting goods stores in the US, according to Census Bureau statistics.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/LCfiv77-JHU/Happy-Father-s-Day-Dad-s-chores-worth-less-than-Mom-s

hillary clinton apple stock Pro Bowl 2013 Kick Ass Torrents jamarcus russell Sloane Stephens Beyonce Lip Sync

Saturday, June 15, 2013

World Has 10 Years of Shale Oil: US Department of Energy

CNBC

By Gregory Meyer on June 11, 2013 at 12:44am

Global shale resources are vast enough to cover more than a decade of oil consumption, according to the first-ever U.S. assessment of reserves from Russia to Argentina.

The U.S. Department of Energy estimated ?technically recoverable? shale oil resources of 345 billion barrels in 42 countries it surveyed, or 10 percent of global crude supplies. The department had previously only provided an estimate for U.S. shale reserves, which it on Monday increased from 32 billion barrels to 58 billion.

The pace of oil and gas production gains has consistently surprised forecasters since horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing, better known as ?fracking?, were pioneered in U.S. shale rock formations about ten years ago. Only the U.S. and Canada were producing oil and natural gas from shale in commercial quantities, the department said.

Read the full story here.

Source: http://themarcellusshale.com/world-has-10-years-of-shale-oil-us-department-of-energy/

anonymous texas chainsaw massacre nfl playoffs crystal harris Texas A Texas A&m cotton bowl

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Comet Lovejoy survives boiling brush with Sun, does victory dance

Comet Lovejoy's unlikely trip close to the sun's surface has given scientists a wealth of new information about our sun.

By Elizabeth Barber,?Contributor / June 7, 2013

Comet Lovejoy sails out of the sun's corona in December 2011.

AP/NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory

Enlarge

This was not a tale that should have had a happy ending. When Comet Lovejoy sped into the Sun?s corona in 2011, scientists did not expect the daredevil to survive. Astronomers had already tracked 2,000 similar comets making the same inadvisable trip. None had made it, all melting into the sun?s super-hot glow.

Skip to next paragraph

' + google_ads[0].line2 + '
' + google_ads[0].line3 + '

'; } else if (google_ads.length > 1) { ad_unit += ''; } } document.getElementById("ad_unit").innerHTML += ad_unit; google_adnum += google_ads.length; return; } var google_adnum = 0; google_ad_client = "pub-6743622525202572"; google_ad_output = 'js'; google_max_num_ads = '1'; google_feedback = "on"; google_ad_type = "text"; // google_adtest = "on"; google_image_size = '230x105'; google_skip = '0'; // -->

But Lovejoy did live ? and it is now telling scientists new tales about our sun.

"It's absolutely astounding," says Karl Battams, of the Naval Research Lab in Washington DC, in a press release.?"I did not think the comet's icy core was big enough to survive plunging through the several million degree solar corona for close to an hour, but Comet Lovejoy is still with us."

Not only did Lovejoy survive its sunny jaunt ? it began to dance. Or rather, its tail started to wiggle.

Now, in a new paper published in Science, scientists detail what they learned about our sun as they watched the wily comet?s veritable suicide mission.

Comet Lovejoy, known to scientists as C/2011 W3, passed within just 87,000 miles of the sun?s surface for two days in December 2011. When it did, the comet began to evaporate in the sun?s scorch, leaving behind a tail-like trail of material that scientists could observe from multiple perspectives by using five different spacecraft. As the comet?s tail began to wiggle in a seeming victory dance, the scientists fed data from their multiple perspectives on the show into a computer that created a magnetohydrodynamic model of the sun's atmosphere.

Scientists also found the tail?s flits could suggest that the comet was surrounded by plasma waves running through the corona, or that the tail was bouncing on huge magnetic loops in the sun's atmosphere, raising new questions about sun?s atmosphere.

"This is all new," said Battams, in a press release. The new information ?is giving us our first look at comets traveling through the sun's atmosphere. How the two interact is cutting-edge research."

Comet Lovejoy was the discovery of amateur Australian astronomer Terry Lovejoy in December 2011. It belongs to what is known as the Kreutz family of sun-grazing comets, likely all pieces of a single giant comet that splintered apart in 1106 AD. It is thought to be at least 10 times larger than its other family members, and scientists are now pushing that estimate upwards, as only a comet with an unusually large ice core could have come as stunningly near to the sun and survive.

Scientists are unsure how long Lovejoy will exist after this stressful event, and SOHO and NASA's twin STEREO probes are continuing to monitor the comet as it swishes away from the sun

"There is still a possibility that Comet Lovejoy will start to fragment," said Battams, in a press release. "It's been through a tremendously traumatic event; structurally, it could be extremely weak. On the other hand, it could hold itself together and disappear back into the recesses of the solar system."

Thank you for your service, the not-so-little comet that could.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/iuzx6BVoBMA/Comet-Lovejoy-survives-boiling-brush-with-Sun-does-victory-dance

Meteor Shower August 2012 David Boudia David Rakoff Bourne Legacy London 2012 Soccer Olympics closing ceremony PGA Championship 2012

Chopper video: Hollywood, CA pet store in strip mall burns ...

Jonathan Lloyd, KNBC-TV:

Firefighters carried animals from a strip mall pet store after they sawed through a metal gate to enter the unit and attack a fire that damaged the building?s roof Monday morning in Hollywood.

Aerial video showed firefighters carrying a cage of animals ? possibly puppies or small dogs ? from the building, identified by signage as Kim?s Pets and Fish. It was not immediately clear whether there are more animals in the building.

The fire, reported at about 6 a.m., damaged at least one unit of the strip mall at Lexington and Vermont avenues. Firefighters used a circular saw to cut through a metal gate and enter the building.

Do you want to sell a rig? Click HERE to find out how with SellFireTrucks.com.

Also on STATter911 ?

Comments

comments

Powered by Facebook Comments

Source: http://statter911.com/2013/06/10/chopper-video-hollywood-ca-pet-store-in-stip-mall-burns/

tupac back tax deadline death race buffet rule carlos santana dodgers triple play baa

iOS 7: Instead of Flatness, We Got Depth

iOS 7: Instead of Flatness, We Got Depth

Today, after plenty of self-deprecating jokes about virtual cows, Apple unveiled a sweeping overhaul of the mobile software by Jony Ive. After months of speculation and weeks of rumor-mongering, we finally have our answer: the future of iOS is, actually, is rife with dimensionality and texture. Which is a good thing.

The predicted rebirth Susan Kare?s original black-and-white OS design, it ain?t. Actually, let's just ban using the term "flat" altogether for this post. This iOS 7 we met today was full of what Jony Ive called ?new types of depth.? Alongside a poppy, neon-and-pastel color scheme, the icons, apps, and homescreen of iOS 7 are full of layering and dimensionality. There are also entirely new types of animation: from a screen that uses the accelerometer to adjust in parallax, to beautiful new animated weather icons.

Sure, Jony Ive has gotten rid of many of the richly detailed skeuomorphic elements that were originally designed to help first-time users get to know iOS. But he?s also introduced all sorts of interesting new complexities. For anyone expecting a Windows 8 look alike?you can rest easy. Let?s take a closer look.

iOS 7: Instead of Flatness, We Got Depth

An Ambient, Environment-Sensitive UI

The big focus on today?s unveiling was the apparent simplicity of the apps and icons. But for all the simplicity, the most telling element of the new UI is its complex adaptability to external environmental conditions.

The biggest?and perhaps most elegant?element of the new system is its responsivity. For example, iOS 7 uses the accelerometer to adapt the screen in parallax, achieving "new types of depth," in the words of Jony Ive. And using the phone?s light meter, it seems that the new icons and background adapt to the lighting to improve readability automatically?a bit like the previous iOS' ability to adapt screen brightness to environmental conditions.

Another nice responsive detail? The text and line color of the control panel change according to the color of your home screen image. And, finally, the time and weather seem to appear accurately on the app icons. Goodbye to the endless sunny-and-72-degree days.

iOS 7: Instead of Flatness, We Got Depth

Layering and Depth

The details of the icons and apps are certainly simpler than they are today. But the visual ecology they exist within is far more complex. How? Well, first of all, icons and text aren?t siloed into individual icon buttons or bars. Very often, Ive?s Helvetica Neue Ultra Light type appears directly on the screen. That seems like it?d be simpler?but it?s actually a bigger graphical challenge to orient users to text that's floating in space, rather than text anchored by buttons.

The screen itself was presented as a dense layering of image effects, too. In an exploded axonometric view, we saw a crisp clear background serve as a foundation for a middle layer?the apps?topped off with an elegant blurred panel that serves as a background for the control center. We can glean something about the future of iOS in the use of layers. Rather than treating the homescreen and apps as unique, 3D spaces, iOS 7 uses layering to provide context, instead. It's a bit like Google Now, in a way. Rather than treating the UI as an architectural metaphor, it's treated as a series of layers, or cards.

iOS 7: Instead of Flatness, We Got Depth

The Typeface

Say hello the Helvetica Neue Ultra Light, a slimmer variant of iOS' standard Helvetica Neue. Neue was designed nearly three decades after the original Helvetica. It was redesigned because its early translation into pixels left much to be desired?for example, the italicized version was hastily slanted from the original, and the kerning and widths were irregular and disorganized.

So, in 1983, Linotype commissioned an update for the digital age. The width system was standardized, the curves were redrawn and cleaned up, and even things like punctuation were rejiggered for digital viewing. In a way, Helvetica Neue, and its variant Ultra Light, was one of the first classic typefaces of the computerized era. As a typeface for iOS, it couldn?t make more sense: seen on the sparse banner for today?s conference, the light iteration of Neue looks elegant and clean.

But the increased use of Ultra Light is something of a risk. In many contexts, Ultra Light becomes unreadable?and without the frame and background that all iOS text once lay against, it runs the risk of becoming meek and fragile. It?s certainly beautiful on blurred backgrounds?but if users decide to use a louder, crisper background, it could become problematic.

iOS 7: Instead of Flatness, We Got Depth

The Stock Apps

The new icons, just as we imagined, have lost much of of the reflectivity and depth of the old. The figures themselves have been given an update too: a rainbow-hued palette, and black-and-white backgrounds, make for a lovely little set of icons. There's also a set of wire-frame-esque icons that appear on the blurred, layered background of the lock screen.

Like the new typeface, the icons seem to borrow a bit from a golden age of signage and typography design: the 1930s (and later, the 1970s), when an Austrian designer named Otto Neurath developed a visual language of pictograms called Isotype. His language was intended to transcend traditional language barriers using typographic symbols.

What does this have to do with the iOS 7 icons? Well, the original iOS icons borrowed their rounded edges and simple icons from pictograms?a heritage that's been muddied by increasingly realistic details. By eschewing real-world visual cues for simpler icons, Apple is returning to its roots in pictograms and Isotype. In a way, we can understand this as Ive integrating a rich history of pictogram design into Apple?s design language.

iOS 7: Instead of Flatness, We Got Depth

If Cook and Ive had unveiled a super-simple, black-and-white iOS 7 today, this would be a simpler story. But rather than simplify, they've surgically removed outdated colors and details and replaced them with a series of new, complex UI cues. There are certainly some visual similarities with Android, and the solutions are similar to Windows Phone. But given the usage stats and customer loyalty that Tim Cook quoted in his introduction, the problems and solutions of iOS are unique. Rather than overhaul the system, they're attempting to carefully introduce what amounts to a new kind of visual slang?if the original iOS was built for a 45-year-old newbie, iOS 7 looks like it was designed for a tween. It's more grown-up in terms of functionality, but younger in terms of form.

Ive, in his introduction, hinted at the difference between simplicity and purity thusly: "Design isn't just the way something looks. It's the whole thing, the way something actually works, on so many different levels. Ultimately, of course, design defines so much of our experience. I think there's a profound and enduring beauty in simplicity, in clarity, in efficiency. It's about bringing order to complexity." Order isn't always simple?in fact, it usually tends to be pretty complicated.

Source: http://gizmodo.com/ios-7-instead-of-flatness-we-got-depth-512291484

Roland Garros bay news 9 today show George Karl Shannon Rogers Guess Richardson Cricinfo Hunter Hayes

Sunday, May 19, 2013

Google's Street View Trekker Backpack Co-Creator Talks Unmanned Hikes, Pack Animal Street View

SV_trekker_3_largeGoogle impressed a lot of people when it debuted its Grand Canyon Street View imagery in October. The Trekker backpack used to capture that imagery, which is essentially a backpack-mounted version of the same all-seeing eye that sits atop the Google Street View car.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/dncyjZwpgfU/

Paul Harvey

Saturday, May 18, 2013

Mood Disorders: Help for Dealing with Depression and Anxiety

Hello there! Have you ever tried ? Supreme Panic Magic (erm, check it on google should be there)? Ive heard some? interesting things about it and my auntie after a lifetime of fighting eradicated the panic problem with it.

howcast is now? kinda like expertvillage

Wow. The stigma of mental illness still exists it seems. Doctors and therapists aren?t all evil, they are people. Some are bad, some are good and sometimes you don?t get on with? a doctor and therapist and you need to find another one.

my girlfriend has depression and went to a doctor . They labeled her crazy even though she is far from it . fuck you and your dumbass doctors with a bullshit degree? .

howcast not making a fucking video about going to a doctor for depression yep I?ve been suffering from trauma and depression for years I went to several therapists did nothing for me and here they? are saying go to a doctor.

Wow Howcast, you really? learned how to ruin a perfectly good Youtube channel :)

Not this fucker again.. Thought his videos was done by now? Also that old? bitch that keep on fucking talking about sexual disorders.. Fuck you HowFuck.

Source: http://mental-health.fitnessthroughfasting.com/factitious-disorders/mood-disorders-help-for-dealing-with-depression-and-anxiety.php

myocardial infarction What Is Labor Day jersey shore Pasquale Rotella Michael Clark Duncan