Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Iran's 'axis of resistance' loses its Palestinian arm to Syrian war

Before the uprising against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad began in 2011, Hamas was a key ally of Damascus and a component of the Iran-led "axis of resistance" that challenged Israel and the West in the Middle East.

But after two years of bloodshed in Syria, Hamas has abandoned Damascus and distanced itself from Iran, a major supporter of the Assad regime. Instead the Palestinian militant group is courting potential new suitors, particularly the small but influential Gulf state of Qatar, and Egypt, which controls the crucial southern border of the Hamas-run Gaza Strip and is ruled by the Muslim Brotherhood, the ideological parent of Hamas.

"The Hamas split with Damascus... is undeniable. Hamas could not maintain any relationship with the Syrian regime in the face of the wide and deep opprobrium it faces in the Arab Sunni street, Hamas' principal support base," says Randa Slim, a research fellow at the New America Foundation and a scholar at the Middle East Institute.

But given the shifting dynamics of the region and the sharpening of the Sunni-Shiite divide, Hamas still appears to be keeping its options open with its former patron Iran and fellow anti-Israel resistance group, the Lebanese Shiite militant group Hezbollah.

RECOMMENDED: Sunni and Shiite Islam: Do you know the difference? Take our quiz.

"Hamas is forced to navigate uncharted waters post-Arab Spring and it is in its interest to keep all channels open," says Slim.

MILITARY SUPPORT

The extent of the rupture between Hamas and the Assad regime is underscored by the fact that the Palestinian group is allegedly helping train units of the rebel Free Syrian Army in several areas of eastern Damascus, according to Western diplomats and sources in the Syrian opposition.

The training appears to be specialized, focusing on helping the rebels develop better rockets and dig tunnels from which they can launch attacks in preperation for a widely anticipated offensive to uproot the regime from the capital. The Ezzidine al-Qassam Brigades, the military wing of Hamas, has extensive experience at building tunnels in the Gaza Strip, some for smuggling weapons and goods from neighboring Egypt, and others to infiltrate Israel or launch attacks against Israeli outposts.

?The Qassam Brigades have been training units very close to Damascus ? in Yalda, Jaramana, Babbila. These are specialists. They are really good,? says a Western diplomat with high-level contacts in the Assad regime and the Syrian opposition who visits Damascus regularly.

RELATED ? Who is Hamas? Five questions about the Palestinian militant group

A Syrian opposition source who lives in Damascus confirmed that tunnels were being dug in some areas under rebel control and that the regime is aware of the tactic. The source says that the Syrian army has dug a seven-yard deep trench "to cut off any extending tunnel" around the perimeter of Mezzeh airport, a key military facility in Damascus, and similar measures have been taken around Rawda presidential palace in the center of the capital.

But a senior Hamas official categorically denied allegations that Hamas fighters are training FSA rebels or are involved in any military activities in Syria.

"Our position is clear on what is happening in Syria and we believe there must be a political solution," says Osama Hamdan, who lives in Lebanon. ?There are no members of Ezzidine al-Qassam or any militant members of Hamas in Syria. We don?t interfere in the internal problems of Syria. Our members there are normal civilians, Syrian Palestinians, who live with their families there. From the beginning of what has happened in Syria we rejected as a movement any involvement of any Palestinian in the current events in Syria.?

THE BREAK

The Assad regime has hosted Hamas in Damascus since 1999, when the group was expelled from Jordan. However, when the uprising against the Assad regime began two years ago, Hamas found itself caught between its loyalty to the regime that took it in and obligations to its Palestinian supporters, who overwhelmingly sided with the Syrian opposition.

Furthermore, Sunni Hamas risked angering the predominantly Sunni opposition in Syria by standing beside the regime that is drawn from the Alawite sect, a heterodox Shiite sect, and supported by Shiite Iran and Hezbollah.

According to a Western analyst who has close contacts with the Hamas leadership, Khaled Meshaal, the political leader of Hamas, attempted in August 2011 to persuade Assad to follow a political path to end the crisis, and offered a series of suggestions.

?He, Assad, was intrigued by the Hamas program, which included reconciliation, the call for open elections ? after which Assad would step down ? an exchange of prisoners, a national plebiscite on a new constitution ? seven steps in all,? the analyst says, speaking on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of his contacts with the Hamas leadership.

Assad apparently told Hamas that he liked the seven recommendations and said he would consult with his close aides on how to implement them.

?Twenty four hours after submitting the paper, however, the Hamas political leadership was told that the government had decided to go in another direction. It was at that point that Hamas decided that it would leave Damascus,? the analyst says.

According to a report last week in Kuwait's Al-Rai al-Aam newspaper, Mr. Meshaal enlisted the support of Hezbollah's leader, Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah, in persuading Assad to follow a political path. The report cited a source as describing Assad as ?arrogant and inexperienced? and solely responsible for the crisis by rejecting a political solution.

RELATED ? Hezbollah 101: Who is the militant group and what does it want?

According to the Western analyst, some members of the Hamas leadership initially preferred to remain in Damascus, among them Meshaal's deputy, Moussa Abu Marzouk. But Abu Marzouk apparently changed his mind in October 2011, while driving to Damascus airport for a trip to Cairo.

"Inadvertently, his convoy came across a pile of bodies, the result of fighting by the Syrian Army. The grim spectacle stunned Marzouk," the analyst says.

Meshaal quietly departed Damascus in February 2012 and moved to Qatar. That same month, Ismael Haniyah, the head of the Hamas government in Gaza, openly declared the movement?s support for the Syrian opposition, lauding their struggle to achieve ?freedom, democracy, and reform."

The Assad regime responded by raiding offices and homes of top Hamas officials and seizing cars and equipment belonging to the absent Meshaal. The state-run media accused him of being ?ungrateful and treacherous."

In August 2012, a mid-ranking Hamas official in Damascus was shot dead in his home, an act that Hamas publicly blamed on Israel, although there was speculation that agents of the Assad regime committed the murder.

On April 3, following Meshaal?s reelection as head of Hamas? political wing for a fifth term, Ath-Thawra, a Syrian regime newspaper, said that he had shifted ?the gun from the shoulder of resistance to the shoulder of compromise.?

Meshaal ?cannot believe his luck. After an acclaimed history of struggle, he has returned to the safe Qatari embrace, wealthy, fattened in the age of the Arab Spring?s storms,? it said.

QATAR FILLS THE VOID

For now, Qatar has emerged as Hamas's new sponsor. Meshaal lives in the capital Doha, while Hamas has opened offices in Cairo. The Gulf state helped cement its relationship with Hamas in October 2012, when Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani, the Qatari emir, became the first foreign head of state to visit Hamas-run Gaza. During his visit, he pledged $400 million to the tiny coastal strip.

But while Hamas has abandoned Syria, has it completely renounced its relationship with its former sponsor Iran?

Meshaal admitted last November in an interview with CNN that the Hamas relationship with Iran was "affected and harmed" by disagreements over Syria, but downplayed its severity. "It is not as it used to be in the past, but there is no severing of relations," he said.

The Western analyst says that the break with Iran was "complete and somewhat bitter." But other analysts don't believe that contacts have been entirely broken, partly because Hamas recognizes that during such a turbulent period in the Middle East, it is in no position to throw in its lot with any one particular sponsor. Qatar has proven to be a potentially fickle friend ? little of the $400 million it pledged Gaza has so far been received.

Even Egypt under President Mohammed Morsi ? a member of the Muslim Brotherhood, a Hamas ally ? has proven disappointing for Hamas so far. The Egyptian authorities have blocked smuggling tunnels into Gaza and are more preoccupied with internal developments than actively supporting Hamas with cash and weapons.

"The distancing from Iran may prove problematic because it leaves Hamas more dependent on support from Arab governments that have either proved unreliable or whose interests clash with those of Hamas," says Yezid Sayigh, a senior associate at the Carnegie Middle East Center in Beirut.

"Although Hamas wishes to confirm its Sunni credentials to other Arabs, it has tried to reaffirm relations with Iran and deny irreconcilable differences over Syria," Mr. Sayigh says.

Indeed, while Iran and Hamas can disagree on the fate of the Assad regime - and perhaps actively support opposing sides in that conflict - both parties are still united in their opposition to Israel.

"I doubt a complete rupture of relations between Iran and Hamas. It is in neither party's interest," says Slim of the Middle East Institute. "Iran and Hezbollah's game is always long, nuanced, and strategic. Rarely do they burn bridges with former allies. Even with their enemies, they negotiate while fighting."

RECOMMENDED: Sunni and Shiite Islam: Do you know the difference? Take our quiz.

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/irans-axis-resistance-loses-palestinian-arm-syrian-war-181044731.html

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Another Big Ol? Booty Coming Between Kanye & Kim Kardashian?

Another Big Ol’ Booty Coming Between Kanye & Kim Kardashian?

Kanye hooking up with Iggy Azalea?Kim Kardashian and Kanye West, who are expecting a baby girl together, have hit a rocky patch after the reality star fears the rapper is hooking up with sexy Australian rapper, Iggy Azalea. Insiders reveal Kim worries her weight gain is a huge turn-off to Kanye and worries he might cheat on her! A source ...

Another Big Ol’ Booty Coming Between Kanye & Kim Kardashian? Stupid Celebrities Gossip Stupid Celebrities Gossip News

Source: http://stupidcelebrities.net/2013/04/another-big-ol-booty-coming-between-kanye-kim-kardashian/

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Urban grass might be greener, but that doesn't mean it's 'greener'

Apr. 9, 2013 ? New research from the University of Cincinnati shows how some things you do to make your lawn green might not be conducive to "going green."

Amy Townsend-Small, a UC assistant professor of geology and geography, will present her research, "Carbon Sequestration and Greenhouse Gas Emissions in Urban Ecosystems," at the Association of American Geographers annual meeting to be held April 9-13 in Los Angeles. The interdisciplinary forum is attended by more than 7,000 scientists from around the world and features an array of geography-related presentations, workshops and field trips.

At the meeting, Townsend-Small will discuss the effects lawn-management techniques have on greenhouse gas production in urban landscapes. She says there's a high energy cost associated with common lawn-care methods such as mowing, irrigation and fertilization due to the processing and transport required for these products and services.

"Landscaping is something everyone can understand," Townsend-Small says. "You probably have your own maintenance routine you do. To make your lawn look nice, you need to use fossil fuels, which emit carbon dioxide. Depending on the management intensity, lawns could either be a small sink -- meaning they store carbon -- or a small source of greenhouse gases to the atmosphere."

Fossil fuels are used to power lawn mowers and trimmers, to pump irrigation water, and to make fertilizers -- and all of these activities emit carbon dioxide.

For her research, Townsend-Small monitored the carbon uptake and storage -- known as carbon sequestration -- in the soil of urban lawns in Los Angeles and Cincinnati. Despite the extreme climate variation between the two regions, she found the lawns had surprisingly similar abilities to absorb carbon and store it in soils. But there's a stark contrast in how those lawns are managed, leading to differences in their ecological impact.

Townsend-Small found that while having a well-cared-for lawn will improve its carbon-quelling capacity, intensive lawn care isn't worth the atmospheric side effects. For example, in California's arid environment, the management required and fossil fuel energy expended to keep lawns looking lush consumes so much energy that it counteracts the soil's natural carbon sequestration abilities. But if you head nearly 2,500 miles east to Cincinnati, rainfall is more plentiful. This means more lawns don't require irrigation, helping reduce the carbon cost of lawn maintenance and preserve the carbon sequestration benefits.

This study is the first of its kind to compare the environmental cost of making urban lawns rich and productive with leaving them unmanaged and undisturbed. Two undergraduate students in UC's Women In Science and Engineering program gathered hundreds of local soil samples at different sites and analyzed the emission of powerful greenhouse gases such as nitrous oxide and methane. The University of Cincinnati proved to be an ideal location for Townsend-Small's project thanks to the proximity of the managed green spaces on campus and the natural environment of nearby city parks.

"That's one thing that's special about UC. It's in the middle of the city, and it's a great research site for us because of the access to urban green spaces," Townsend-Small says. "Now we're exploring whether you can reduce the amount of energy you need to make a lawn pretty and preserve the carbon storage in soils."

Townsend-Small's research could prove useful to cities, businesses and urban universities, such as UC, that are interested in reducing their greenhouse gas emissions. Her data offer an important warning to such groups: When measuring your carbon footprint, remember to thoroughly evaluate what's underfoot.

"Urban green space usually gets a lot of credit for all the benefits to the atmosphere," Townsend-Small says. "But most people don't consider the positive influxes of carbon dioxide from lawn maintenance."

Additional contributors to Townsend-Small's research paper were professor Claudia Czimczik (University of California, Irvine) and UC undergraduate researchers Rebecca Ransohoff and Lily Soderlund.

Funding for the Ohio research was provided by Townsend-Small's start-up funding in UC's McMicken College of Arts & Sciences.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Cincinnati. The original article was written by Tom Robinette.

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/aU4KR3s1eEA/130409111607.htm

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Toshiba's Portege Z10t detachable Ultrabook debuts at IDF (hands-on)

Toshiba's upcoming detachable Ultrabook debuts at IDF 2013 Beijing handson

Right after Intel's somewhat mundane announcement of the Ultrabook Convertible and Ultrabook Detachable sub-brands at IDF in Beijing, SVP Kirk Skaugen surprised us by whipping out an unnamed laptop coming from Toshiba, so we jumped onto the stage to get a sniff of the only two units at the venue. Judging by the looks of it, we're confident that this is actually the Portege Z10t that hit the FCC last month -- the vents, camera and logo on the back match those in the drawing (embedded after the break) filed in the application.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/04/10/toshiba-portege-z10t-idf/

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Fans get early look at 'Elysium' footage

(AP) ? The year is 2154, and Earth belongs to the poor. The wealthiest citizens live on "Elysium," an idyllic, disease-free utopia they built in space.

On Monday, a few hundred film fans in Los Angeles, Berlin and Sao Paolo got an early look at the future home of the 1 percent as imagined by "District 9" writer-director Neill Blomkamp.

Blomkamp showed about 10 minutes of footage from the anticipated film during a special screening. Matt Damon, who stars alongside Jodie Foster, introduced the footage in Berlin and appeared at Hollywood's Arclight Theater via satellite.

In the film, Earth is a trash-filled landscape policed unforgivingly by robotic droids. Flying military tanks patrol the sky.

Damon plays a diseased Earthling trying to infiltrate Elysium to save himself, and perhaps all of humanity. A group of Earth-bound rebels outfit him for the journey with a tentacled "strength suit." They use a drill to affix a digital box to his head that allows him to transfer brain contents as effortlessly as computer files.

Foster plays an Elysium administrator determined to keep Damon out. The star of "District 9," Sharlto Copley, plays a bearded villain who works on Earth to protect the wealthy space enclave.

Speaking to reporters after the screening, Blomkamp hinted that there could be a sequel to his breakthrough debut.

"I think the world of 'District 9' has a lot of very interesting race and impression-based ideas that I would still like to explore in that world," he said.

"Elysium" opens Aug. 9.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-04-08-Film-Elysium-First%20Look/id-fe749a2adea3451097946b80a84f1e98

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Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Samsung T159 (T-Mobile)


Plenty of T-Mobile users recently had reason to rejoice when the carrier unveiled its long-awaited iPhone. But not everyone needs a phone as powerful as that. There's still a market for simple flip phones, and the $19.99 Samsung T159 is there for anyone who's looking for a phone to just make calls. It's simple to use, with a large number pad and good call quality. But the camera is poor, there are few other features, and the phone ultimately costs a little more than it probably should. It's a decent option if you want something simple, but you don't have to look too hard to find something better.

Design and Call Quality
The Samsung T159 measures 3.8 by 1.9 by 0.6 inches (HWD) and weighs just 2.9 ounces. It's made entirely of black plastic with a lightly textured finish on the back panel. There's a volume rocker on the left, and a Camera button on the right, below the covered power/nonstandard headphone jack. The black-and-white 1.07-inch external display shows the time, date, reception, and battery life at a glance, and will show the name or number for incoming calls, but it only stays illuminated for a few seconds before turning off.

The internal 1.8-inch display features 160-by-128-pixel resolution. It's very small, and there's no way to change the font size, but at least the default is readable. The number pad below is better. The keys are large and backlit, though there isn't much separation. Still, they're big enough that you probably won't press the wrong button. Above the number keys is a simple directional pad with a Select button in the middle.

The T159 is a quad-band (850/900/1800/1900 MHz) GSM device that runs on T-Mobile's HSPA 7.2 network (there's no Wi-Fi support). Reception is good and call quality is above average. Voices sound very full and clear in the phone's earpiece. Calls made with the phone are also quite good, with solid background noise cancellation. The speakerphone sounds clear but a bit thin, and is loud enough to hear in the car, but not outside. The T159 had no trouble pairing with my Jawbone Era?Bluetooth headset, and the Nuance-powered voice dialing app worked well. Battery life was a little short, at 5 hours and 33 minutes of talk time.

T-Mobile's new contract-free plans start at $50 per month, which gets you all the talk and texts you want, along with 500MB of high-speed (3G) data per month, after which your speeds are slowed to 2G. $60 gets you 2GB of high-speed data, while $70 gets you unlimited high-speed data. These are excellent rates compared to competitors like AT&T and Verizon. On the other hand, you're paying for all that data on a phone that just can't do much with it. If all you want is a simple phone to make calls, you can save $10 per month and still get unlimited talk and text with a phone on Virgin Mobile.

And while the T159 costs just $19.99 up front, you have to pay a $3 monthly fee for 24 months, which works out to a total $91.99. You can also pay for the whole thing up front and avoid the monthly surcharge. But really, a phone like this should be free.

Apps, Multimedia, and Conclusions
The UI is responsive and easy to navigate, though some functions can be hard to find. The home screen is mostly blank, aside from links to the main menu and Web browser. The main menu features nine different shortcuts, which link you to your contacts, messages, settings, and a T-Mobile app store.

There are no email or IM clients, though you can still access email through the Access NetFront 4.2 browser for WAP pages. But the phone's screen is so small, and the browser is so outdated, that trying to surf the Web feels like more trouble than it's worth. For text messages, you'll need to type out letters using the number keys, which is always a pain, but at least the number keys are big and easy to press. The T159 displays messages individually, or threaded, in the style of a conversation.

There's no microSD card slot, but you get about 100MB of free storage, which is more than enough, since there isn't much you can store. Multimedia support is virtually nonexistent, as there are no music or video players.

You do get a 1.3-megapixel camera, which you can access by pressing the Camera button on the right side of the phone. Images look dark and grainy, especially those taken indoors. Videos max out at a tiny, blurry 320 by 240 pixels, and you can only record 30 seconds at a time, not that you'd want more.

The Samsung T159 doesn't try to reinvent the wheel. But in a world filled with seemingly space-age smartphones, sometimes something old and familiar can be comforting, which is the case with the T159. But it's not hard to find better options. The keyboarded Samsung Gravity TXT?is a better choice if you like texting, and if you're interested in functions beyond just making calls, you're better off with a smartphone. Phones like the HTC One S?or HTC Windows Phone 8X?cost a lot more than the T159 overall, but you're still paying the same monthly service fees, and you're getting a phone that can do a whole lot more.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/IV7yFc4Loc0/0,2817,2417456,00.asp

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Monday, April 8, 2013

Here's Why Black People Have to Wait Twice as Long to Vote as Whites (Atlantic Politics Channel)

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Blake Shelton & Miranda Lambert Share a Steamy Smooch!

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Republican lawmakers seek details on Beyonce, Jay Z Cuba trip

(Reuters) - Two Republican members of Congress have asked the U.S. Treasury Department for information on what type of license American pop star Beyonce and rapper husband Jay Z obtained for a high-profile trip to Cuba to celebrate their wedding anniversary.

Beyonce and Jay Z celebrated their fifth wedding anniversary this week in Havana, where big crowds greeted them as they strolled hand in hand through the Cuban capital.

They ate at some of the city's best restaurants, danced to Cuban music, walked through historic Old Havana and posed for pictures with admiring Cubans, who recognized them despite the past half-century of ideological conflict that separates the United States and Cuba.

In a letter dated on Friday, U.S. Representatives Ileana Ros-Lehtinen and Mario Diaz-Balart, asked Adam Szubin, director of the Office of Foreign Assets Control, for "information regarding the type of license that Beyonce and Jay-Z received, for what purpose, and who approved such travel."

Ros-Lehtinen and Mario Diaz-Balart represent districts in south Florida where there is a high Cuban-American population.

"Despite the clear prohibition against tourism in Cuba, numerous press reports described the couple's trip as tourism, and the Castro regime touted it as such in its propaganda," the letter said.

"We represent a community of many who have been deeply and personally harmed by the Castro regime's atrocities, including former political prisoners and the families of murdered innocents."

Representatives for Beyonce did not immediately respond for comment on Saturday.

The long-standing U.S. trade embargo against Cuba prevents most Americans from traveling to the island without a license granted by the U.S. government, although President Barack Obama's administration has eased restrictions on travel to Cuba for academic, religious or cultural exchanges.

In Washington this week, the State Department said it had no prior knowledge of the visit. A spokeswoman at the U.S. Interests Section in Havana said she did not know if the celebrity couple obtained a license for their trip. If they did not, they could be exposed to a fine.

(Reporting by Nick Carey; Editing by Dan Whitcomb and Peter Cooney)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/republican-reps-seek-information-beyonce-jay-z-havana-021310136.html

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Sunday, April 7, 2013

Kennedy joins Iranian exiles protesting in Sweden

STOCKHOLM (AP) ? Hundreds of supporters of an Iranian opposition group have rallied in Stockholm, denouncing the Islamic Republic's regime and urging the U.N. to better protect the group's members in neighboring Iraq.

Former U.S. Congressman Patrick Kennedy was among the speakers Saturday at the demonstration in support of the Mujahedin-e Khalq, or MEK.

The crowd waved Iranian flags and chanted "down with Mullahs' regime" before marching toward the Swedish Parliament.

The MEK fought alongside Saddam Hussein's forces in the Iran-Iraq war and until recently was listed by the U.S. as a terrorist organization. The group says it renounced violence in 2001.

The U.N. says more than 3,000 MEK members live at a former U.S. military base in Iraq. Iraq still considers MEK a terrorist group and wants it out of the country.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/kennedy-joins-iranian-exiles-protesting-sweden-131048970.html

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Animal Photos Of The Week: Tigers, Capybaras, Elephants And More Pictures

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (4/1-4/7)

    Valentina, a two-month old puma cub, bites the nose of a carer at the Attica Zoological Park in Athens, Tuesday, April 2, 2013. (AP Photo/Thanassis Stavrakis)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (4/1-4/7)

    A capybara rests on one of the banks of the Paraguay river, in Corumba, a municipality in the Brazilian state of Mato Grosso do Sul gateway to the Pantanal, on April 4, 2013. Often referred to as the world?s largest freshwater wetland system, the Pantanal, is a stunning biodiversity sanctuary which extends through millions of hectares in central-western Brazil, eastern Bolivia and eastern Paraguay. It includes sanctuaries for migratory birds, nursery grounds for aquatic life, and refuges for such creatures as the yacare caiman, deer, and jaguar. Some 4,500 different species live in the Pantanal. (YASUYOSHI CHIBA/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (4/1-4/7)

    A capybara rests on one of the banks of the Paraguay river, in Corumba, a municipality in the Brazilian state of Mato Grosso do Sul gateway to the Pantanal, on April 4, 2013. Often referred to as the world?s largest freshwater wetland system, the Pantanal, is a stunning biodiversity sanctuary which extends through millions of hectares in central-western Brazil, eastern Bolivia and eastern Paraguay. It includes sanctuaries for migratory birds, nursery grounds for aquatic life, and refuges for such creatures as the yacare caiman, deer, and jaguar. Some 4,500 different species live in the Pantanal. (YASUYOSHI CHIBA/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (4/1-4/7)

    Water trickles down the head of a 38-year-old female elephant named Mali at the Manila Zoo, in the Philippines on Thursday, April 4, 2013. Zoo workers said they are showering the animals more frequently and boosting their drinking water with electrolytes as temperatures rise during the summer months. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (4/1-4/7)

    Amur leopard Xembalo looks through the bars of its enclosure at the zoo in Leipzig, Germany, Wednesday April 3, 2013. (AP Photo/dpa,Hendrik Schmidt)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (4/1-4/7)

    The new red panda at the Pittsburgh Zoo and PPG Aquarium munches on food given to it by it's keeper in the new exhibit on Thursday, April 4, 2013, in Pittsburgh. This panda is native to the mountains of Nepal, Myanmar, and central China. (AP Photo/Keith Srakocic)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (4/1-4/7)

    A carer feeds milk to three-week old lion cub Akinta at the Attica Zoological Park in Athens, Tuesday, April 2, 2013. (AP Photo/Thanassis Stavrakis)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (4/1-4/7)

    One year old tigers play in a small pond at the Indian Nandankana Zoological park in Bhubaneswar on April 4, 2013. (ASIT KUMAR/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (4/1-4/7)

    A chimpanzee licks a block of ice as it is given to beat the summer heat at Dusit Zoo in Bangkok Tuesday, April 2, 2013. The weather is turning warmer in Thailand as the country enters its summer season. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (4/1-4/7)

    A giraffe licks a block of ice as it is given to beat the summer heat at Dusit Zoo in Bangkok, Thailand, Tuesday, April 2, 2013. The weather is turning warmer in Thailand as the country enters its summer season. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (4/1-4/7)

    An Eurasian Eagle Owl sits in its enclosure in Munich's Hellabrunn zoo, Wednesday April 3, 2013. (AP Photo/dpa, Frank Leonhardt)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (4/1-4/7)

    A Snowy Owl sits in its enclosure in the amusement park Geiselwind, southern Germany Thursday April 4, 2013. (AP Photo/dpa,Karl-Josef Hildenbrand)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (4/1-4/7)

    A male Indian peacock photographed at amusement park Geiselwind, southern Germany Thursday April 4, 2013. (AP Photo/dpa, Karl-Josef Hildenbrand)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (4/1-4/7)

    A black condor eats a dead alligator floating in the Paraguay river, in Corumba, a municipality in the Brazilian state of Mato Grosso do Sul gateway to the Pantanal, on April 4, 2013. Often referred to as the world?s largest freshwater wetland system, the Pantanal, is a stunning biodiversity sanctuary which extends through millions of hectares in central-western Brazil, eastern Bolivia and eastern Paraguay. It includes sanctuaries for migratory birds, nursery grounds for aquatic life, and refuges for such creatures as the yacare caiman, deer, and jaguar. Some 4,500 different species live in the Pantanal. (YASUYOSHI CHIBA/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (4/1-4/7)

    A picture taken on April 5, 2013 shows a smooth-hound shark (C) in the aquarium of Talmont-Saint-Hilaire, western France. Three females gave birth in captivity to twenty five smooth-hound sharks measuring betwen 20 and 30 cm (8 to 12 inches). The aquarium keeps twelve females caught by fishermen of Les Sables d'Olonne one year ago. (JEAN-SEBASTIEN EVRARD/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (3/25-3/31)

    Ring-tailed lemurs sit in their enclosure in the zoo in Straubing, southern Germany, Monday March 25, 2013. (AP Photo/dpa, Armin Weigel)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (3/25-3/31)

    Olivia, a five-year-old Angolan colobus monkey, clutches her baby which was born March 9, at the Brookfield Zoo on March 27, 2013 in Brookfield, Illinois. The infant monkeys are born completely white, turn gray, and then black, their adult coloration, in approximately three months. Angolan colobuses are native to dense rain forests throughout equatorial Africa. (Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (3/25-3/31)

    Olivia (C), a five-year-old Angolan colobus monkey, clutches her baby which was born March 9, at the Brookfield Zoo on March 27, 2013 in Brookfield, Illinois. The infant monkeys are born completely white, turn gray, and then black, their adult coloration, in approximately three months. Angolan colobuses are native to dense rain forests throughout equatorial Africa. (Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (3/25-3/31)

    A Southern Rockhopper Penguin is fed by a keeper at the new Polar World at Hellabrunn Zoo in Munich,?Germany, Tuesday March 26, 2013. (AP Photo/dpa,Frank Leonhardt)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (3/25-3/31)

    The yet unnamed male koala joey rides on his mother Goonderrah's back at the Zoo in Duisburg, western Germany on Wednesday, March 27, 2013. The little Koala left his mother's pouch after six months for the first time. The Duisburg Zoo is one of the major breeding units for Koalas in Europe. (AP Photo/Frank Augstein)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (3/25-3/31)

    The yet unnamed male koala joey rides on his mother Goonderrah's back at the Zoo in Duisburg, western Germany on Wednesday, March 27, 2013. The little Koala left his mother's pouch after six months for the first time. The Duisburg Zoo is one of the major breeding units for Koalas in Europe. (AP Photo/Frank Augstein)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (3/25-3/31)

    A photo taken on March 25, 2013 shows a male lion at a zoological park the eastern French city of Amneville. (JEAN-CHRISTOPHE VERHAEGEN/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (3/25-3/31)

    Male walrus Odin swims in the Polar Sea enclosure at Hagenbeck Zoo in Hamburg,?Germany, Easter Sunday March 31, 2013. (AP Photo/dpa,Christian Charisius)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (3/25-3/31)

    Female walrus Dyana swims in the Polar Sea enclosure at Hagenbeck Zoo in Hamburg,?Germany, Sunday March 31, 2013. (AP Photo/dpa,Christian Charisius)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (3/25-3/31)

    Young Malayan tapir 'Baru' runs in his enclosure in the zoo of Leipzig. eastern Germany, Wednesday March 27, 2013. (AP Photo/dpa, Jan Woitas)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (3/25-3/31)

    Melati a female Sumatran Tiger licks her lips after eating a snack of a dead rabbit hidden in a papier mache easter egg, at London Zoo, Wednesday, March 27, 2013. Tiger Territory is a newly opened tiger enclosure designed by keepers and conservationists, the zoo is hoping the Indonesian inspired enclosure with climbing trees, a pool for swimming and 2,500square metres to roam will encourage the two tigers to breed. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (3/25-3/31)

    Jae Jae, a male Sumatran Tiger scratches a tree, as the public watch from behind glass, at London Zoo, Wednesday, March 27, 2013. Tiger Territory is a newly opened tiger enclosure designed by keepers and conservationists, the zoo is hoping the Indonesian inspired enclosure with climbing trees, a pool for swimming and 2,500square metres to roam will encourage the two tigers to breed. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (3/25-3/31)

    A komodo dragon peers into the camera at the Los Angeles Zoo and Botanical Garden in Los Angeles on March 26, 2013. (JOE KLAMAR/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (3/25-3/31)

    An Olive Baboon looks at a piece of snow picked up from the ground in its enclosure at Berlin's Zoologischer Garten zoo March 26, 2013. Low temperatures and snowfall have continued to plague the capital. (JOHN MACDOUGALL/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (3/25-3/31)

    A photo taken on March 25, 2013 shows a male lion at a zoological park the eastern French city of Amneville. (JEAN-CHRISTOPHE VERHAEGEN/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (3/25-3/31)

    A photo taken on March 25, 2013 shows a male lion at a zoological park the eastern French city of Amneville. (JEAN-CHRISTOPHE VERHAEGEN/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (3/25-3/31)

    A two-month-old baby Bennett's tree-kangaroo peers out of its mother's pouch at the Zoo in the southern Russian city of Stavropol, on March 28, 2013. (DANIL SEMYONOV/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (3/25-3/31)

    This Wednesday, March 27, 2013 photo shows "Gladys", a 2 month-old Western Lowland Gorilla at the Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden. Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden Primate Team Leader Ron Evans says? Gladys? is in good health, developing and growing quickly with loving care from 10 humans imitating a gorilla mother's behavior. (AP Photo/The Cincinnati Enquirer, Glenn Hartong)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (3/25-3/31)

    A photo taken on March 25, 2013 shows an Eurasian lynx at a zoological park the eastern French city of Amneville. (JEAN-CHRISTOPHE VERHAEGEN/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (3/25-3/31)

    A photo taken on March 25, 2013 shows Eurasian lynxes at a zoological park the eastern French city of Amneville. (JEAN-CHRISTOPHE VERHAEGEN/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (3/25-3/31)

    A picture taken on March 25, 2013 shows a blue peacock at the Amneville zoo, eastern France. (JEAN-CHRISTOPHE VERHAEGEN/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (3/25-3/31)

    An Eurasian brown bear plays with a strap on March 25, 2013 at a zoological park the eastern French city of Amneville. (JEAN-CHRISTOPHE VERHAEGEN/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (3/25-3/31)

    An Eurasian brown bear plays with a strap on March 25, 2013 at a zoological park the eastern French city of Amneville. (JEAN-CHRISTOPHE VERHAEGEN/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (3/25-3/31)

    A male gorilla rests at the Los Angeles Zoo and Botanical Garden in Los Angeles on March 26, 2013. (JOE KLAMAR/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (3/25-3/31)

    A male gorilla shows off at the Los Angeles Zoo and Botanical Garden in Los Angeles on March 26, 2013. (JOE KLAMAR/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (3/25-3/31)

    A Desert Bighorn sheep rests at the Los Angeles Zoo and Botanical Garden in Los Angeles on March 26, 2013. (JOE KLAMAR/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (3/25-3/31)

    A male gorilla streches at the Los Angeles Zoo and Botanical Garden in Los Angeles on March 26, 2013. (JOE KLAMAR/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (3/25-3/31)

    A zebra plays with its dinner at the Los Angeles Zoo and Botanical Garden in Los Angeles on March 26, 2013. (JOE KLAMAR/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (3/25-3/31)

    A zebra is pictured at the Los Angeles Zoo and Botanical Garden in Los Angeles on March 26, 2013. (JOE KLAMAR/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (3/25-3/31)

    A koala bear is helped by a keeper to climb down at the Los Angeles Zoo and Botanical Garden in Los Angeles on March 26, 2013. (JOE KLAMAR/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (3/25-3/31)

    A meerkat checks visitors at the Los Angeles Zoo and Botanical Garden in Los Angeles on March 26, 2013. (JOE KLAMAR/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (3/25-3/31)

    Young Asian elephant Anchali throws some dirt on herself at Berlin's Zoologischer Garten zoo March 26, 2013. (JOHN MACDOUGALL/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (3/25-3/31)

    An Asiatic elephant male calf poses under his mother Sammy at Zoomadrid in Madrid on March 28, 2013. The young pachyderm was born on March 2, 2013 at Madrid's zoo. (DOMINIQUE FAGET/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (3/25-3/31)

    Flamingos walk on the grass at Zoomadrid in Madrid on March 28, 2013. (DOMINIQUE FAGET/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (3/25-3/31)

    An Asian lion mother Shirwane (L) takes care of her one and half month babies at Budapest Zoo and Botanic Garden of Budapest, on March 28, 2013. The small animals were born on February 15, 2013 in the zoo of the Hungarian capital. The newborn lions are revealed to the public today. (ATTILA KISBENEDEK/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Animal Photos Of The Week (3/25-3/31)

    An Asian lion mother Shirwane (L) sits next to her one and half month babies at Budapest Zoo and Botanic Garden of Budapest, on March 28, 2013. The small animals were born on February 15, 2013 in the zoo of the Hungarian capital. The newborn lions are revealed to the public today. (ATTILA KISBENEDEK/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/07/animal-photos-of-the-week_n_3030524.html

    Tropical Storm Isaac path Hurricane Katrina Hurricane Isaac Path Isaac Hurricane earthquake san diego Hurricane Isaac Sam Claflin

    Kansas set to enact life-starts-"at fertilization" abortion law

    By Kevin Murphy

    KANSAS CITY, Kansas (Reuters) - Kansas is set to enact one of the most restrictive abortion laws in the nation which defines life as beginning "at fertilization" and imposes a host of new regulations.

    The Kansas House of Representatives passed the bill 90-30 on Friday night, a few hours after the Senate backed it on a 28-10 vote. Strongly anti-abortion Republican Governor Sam Brownback is expected to sign it into law. Republicans hold strong majorities in both houses.

    In addition to the provision specifying when life begins, the bill prevents employees of abortion clinics from providing sex education in schools, bans tax credits for abortion services and requires clinics to give details to women about fetal development and abortion health risks. It also bans abortions based solely on the gender of the fetus.

    The Kansas bill comes on the heels of anti-abortion measures passing in states across the country, including one in Arkansas banning abortions in the 12th week of pregnancy and a law in North Dakota that sets the limit at six weeks.

    The Kansas language stating that life begins "at fertilization" is modeled on a 1989 ruling of the U.S. Supreme Court, said Kathy Ostrowski, legislative director of Kansans for Life, anti-abortion group.

    Ostrowski said the language protects the rights of the unborn in probate and other legal matters.

    If the bill is signed into law, Kansas will become the eighth state declaring that life begins at fertilization, said Elizabeth Nash, state issues manager of the pro-choice Guttmacher Institute, which researches abortion-related laws nationwide.

    While it would not supplant Kansas law banning most abortions after the 22nd week of pregnancy, it does set the state up to more swiftly outlaw all abortions should the U.S. Supreme Court revisit its 1973 ruling making abortion legal, Nash said.

    "It's a statement of intent and it's a pretty strong statement," Nash said. "Should the U.S. Supreme Court overturn Roe v. Wade or should the court come to some different conclusion, the state legislature would be ready, willing and able to ban abortions."

    States that already have such language are Missouri, Kentucky, Arkansas, Illinois, Louisiana, North Dakota and Ohio, Nash said.

    The Kansas bill prohibits use of public funds, tax preferences or tax credits for abortion services. It prevents state-provided public health-care services from being used in any manner to carry out abortions, according to a summary.

    Taking away tax benefits would amount to 12 tax increases for abortion providers, women and their families, said Elise Higgins, Kansas coordinator for the National Organization for Women. Even abortions to save a mother's life would not be a deductible cost, she said.

    Higgins also criticized the bill's requirement that women be told of possible connection between abortion and later risk of breast cancer. "It's an obvious intrusion into the doctor-patient relationship by making them get this inaccurate information," Higgins said.

    Ostrowski said the bill merely requires that patients be referred to online and other material about abortion and breast cancer. It does not steer them to misinformation, she said.

    The bill bars school districts from letting abortion providers offer, sponsor or furnish course materials or instruction on human sexuality or on sexually transmitted diseases. Higgins said that creates an unfair stigma for employees of abortion providers.

    Another portion of the new law would prevent women from deciding on an abortion solely because of the gender of the fetus. It is unclear how many women terminate pregnancies for that reason.

    (Reporting by Kevin Murphy; Editing by Greg McCune, Doina Chiacu and Gunna Dickson)

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/kansas-senate-passes-abortion-restrictions-014146445.html

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    Saturday, April 6, 2013

    Judge Gives Green Light To Claims That Apple And Google Agreed To Suppress Salaries

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    This weekend's MacUpdate Promo offers 55% savings on Slidevana Bundle for PowerPoint and Keynote 1.0.0. ?Slidevana Bundle for Keynote and PowerPoint features over 150 customizable slides that emphasize your information and focus your audience. Each slide in this collection is designed based on the techniques of top management consulting firms like McKinsey, Bain, and BCG. Make your next presentation more engaging and effective with Slidevana templates for Keynote and PowerPoint.?

    Apple appears to be gaining ground against Android. Do you think this is accurate? Vote for the results in the left column below or go straight to the results here.

    Weekend Highlights: Over at AppleInsider, Daniel Eran Dilger interprets Apple's market disruption savvy as bad news for Samsung going forward; Jason O'Grady at ZDNet summarizes recent discussions about iCloud in the developer community and defines it as an ultimatum for Apple to respond to by June; More on supposed cost-overruns at the new Cupertino-based Mothership from Macworld UK; FOSS Patents reports that in the ongoing ITC case between Samsung and Apple, Samsung's text selection appears to violate two Apple patents; Rumors persist that Apple is close to closing a streaming music deal with major labels; Tim Cook's apology to China is now fully translated and available online; Apple continues to gain ground against Android in U.S. smartphone market share; Asymco further analyzes the reasons for iOS outperformance in the U.S; Cult of Mac provides an in-depth review of Ulysses 3, a new text editor with several innovative features.

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    Sat Apr 6
    "Judge Gives Green Light To Claims That Apple And Google Agreed To Suppress Salaries" Agence France Presse 7:43 AM
    News
    • "Microsoft: No more support for you, Office for Mac 2008/Continues to shortchange Mac users with just five years of Office support; Windows customers get support twice as long"?Computerworld?4/5
    AppleCare/Troubleshooting
    • "How To Protect Macs in the Enterprise: Mac OS X has developed a reputation for security ? which means many people ignore measures they should take to secure Macs in the enterprise."?eSecurity Planet?7:28 AM
    • "Q&A: MacFixIt Answers/Readers ask about options for managing birthdays in the OS X calendar, and other Mac-related questions."?CNET Reviews?4/5
    • "iMovie '11: Some Video clips may not import into iMovie when using the Camera Import window"?Apple Support?4/5
    Reviews/How-To/Tips
    • "Ulysses 3, A Text Editor From The Future [Review]?Cult of Mac?4/5
    • "How To copy a file path in OS X: There are several approaches you can take to reveal and copy full file paths as text in OS X."?CNET Reviews?4/5
    • "Ask the Script Doctor: Deduping Contacts and more"?Macworld?4/5
    • "How To Manage Your Mac's Disk Space Using DaisyDisk"?Mactuts+?4/5
    • "Mac Gems: Disk Doctor 2.1 frees up storage space on your Mac"?Macworld?4/5
    • "What Every Writer Needs: A New And Better Writing Environment For The Mac (hint: Ulysses III)"?Mac 360?4/5
    • "The App For Mac Users Only: The World's Best Free Text Editor Is Loaded With Features"?Mac 360?4/5
    • "App of the Week: How This Mac App Adds New Meaning To 'In The Zone"?TeraTalks?4/5
    • "2 Great Color Management Tools That Every Mac Graphic Designer Or Web Developer Needs"?McSolo?4/5
    • "Try The Free Menubar App That Hides And Unhides Apps, Quits All Apps With A Single Click"?NoodleMac?4/5
    Op/Ed
    Press Releases
    • "Borderlands 2 Mac Gains MultiPlayer, Content Packs, Save Big"?FairerPlatform?4/5
    • "Graphisoft touts ArchiCAD and Portuguese Architecture"?Architosh?4/5
    • "Sailfish OS SDK released for Linux, Windows and Mac"?Engadget?4/5
    • "Jolla releases Sailfish OS SDK for Mac, Windows and Linux"?Electronista?4/5
    • "US Army threatened by rogue iPhones"?FOXNews?7:20 AM
    • "How JC Penney is using iPod Touches to revamp customer service in 1,100 stores"?CITEworld?4/5
    • "Consumerism in China Reflected in Fake Apple Gifts for the Dead"?The Mac Observer?4/5
    • "Judge denies class action certification in poaching lawsuit involving Apple, Google"?AppleInsider?4/5
    • "Apple's 'iRadio' Reportedly close to launch, yet labels still have to sign: The streaming service is expected to be ad-supported and offer easy downloads."?Ars Technica?4/5
    • "Apple tweaks its online store with new touch-friendly scrollable menu bar"?AppleInsider?4/5
    • "Apple online store updated with iOS friendly navigation bar, other tweaks"?9 to 5 Mac?4/5
    • "Tim Cook's apology to Chinese customers fully translated, published online"?AppleInsider?4/5
    • "iTunes accounts with credit cards a 'tremendous asset' for potential Apple e-wallet"?AppleInsider?4/5
    Non-Apple News
    • "Google Invents a New Compass Interface for Google Maps"?Patent Bolt?4/5
    • "Samsung sacrificing innovation in a bid to out-do Apple?"?Reuters?4/5
    • "Match this: Audi unleashes $15/month unlimited in-car 3G WiFi"?ExtremeTech?4/5
    Publications/Podcasts
    • "The TouchArcade Show - 98 - In Loving Memory of Jared's Beard"?Touch Arcade?7:52 AM
    • "Gene Steinberg meets John Rizzo, from MacWindows.com, and Daniel Eran Dilger, from AppleInsider, this week on the Tech Night Owl LIVE!"?The Tech Night Owl LIVE?4/5
    • "YML Interview -'Thomas Matthews, Executive Editor, Wine Spectator"?Your Mac Life?4/5
    • "YML Interview - 'Michael Hiltzik, How Apple invites facile analysis'"?Your Mac Life?4/5
    • "Latest iOS 7 concept shows slick widget integration, enhanced lockscreen & much more"?9 to 5 Mac?4/5
    • "Is this the iPhone 5S or iPhone 6? Pics of Curvy Apple smartphone emerge"?ITProPortal?4/5
    • "VirnetX patent loss forcing Apple to change its iOS VPN On Demand in forthcoming update"?9 to 5 Mac?4/5
    • "Pre-orders for T-Mobile iPhone 5 go live ahead of April 12 launch"?AppleInsider?4/5
    • "Technologies you could see in future Macs, part 5: Macs with foldable screens"?Apple Daily Report?4/5
    Apple Patent Applications
    • "Apple working on ways to grant indirect authentication for content on an authorizing device"?Apple Daily Report?4/5
    AppleCare/Helps
    • "Troubleshooting Mighty Mouse and determining expected behavior"?Apple Support?4/5
    Price Trackers/Deals
    • "Crow For iPhone and iPad Is Temporarily Available For Free (Normally $4.99)"?Apple Sliced?9:31 AM
    • "GraalOnline Zone+ For iPhone and iPad Is Free Right Now (Previously $0.99)"?Apple Sliced?9:32 AM
    • "NOPE For iPhone and iPad Is Free Today (Was $0.99)"?Apple Sliced?9:32 AM
    • "Best Selling Mac Scanners -From $89 To $432 -Prices, Reviews And Information"?MacReviewZone?9:14 AM
    • "Mac Compatible Printers... From $79 To $400 -Best Selling -Prices, Reviews And Information"?MacReviewZone?8:38 AM
    • "Done For Mac Is Temporarily Available For Free (Normally $0.99)"?Apple Sliced?4/5
    • "Static Quest: The Delivery For iPhone and iPad Is Free Right Now (Previously $0.99)"?Apple Sliced?4/5
    • "Crack Cards For iPhone Is Free Today (Was $0.99)"?Apple Sliced?4/5
    • "iPad Buyer's Guide -Prices $298 To $829 -Best iPad Prices Reviews & Information"?MacReviewZone?4/5
    • "Refurbished Apple: EarPods, $18.95; Lightning to 30-pin, $19.95; iPad 2, $324.95"?FairerPlatform?4/5
    • "13" MacBook Pro Prices & Sales"?MacPrices?4/5
    • "15" MacBook Pro Prices & Sales"?MacPrices?4/5
    • "MacBook Pro Prices -13 Inch Models -$800 To $2,100 -Best Deals, Reviews & Information"?MacReviewZone?4/5
    • "MacBook Air Prices -$707 To $1,599 -Best Deals, Reviews And Information"?MacReviewZone?4/5

    Deal Brothers Daily Deal: Snapheal for Mac 60% off Today and Tomorrow


    • "How Facebook Home Screws Apple ? Cult of Mac"?DaVid Chartier?5:34 PM
    • "Former Apple consultant: Apple's iPhone naming conventions send 'weak message'"?AppleInsider?2:52 PM
    • "The Macalope Weekly: Crackpot theories"?Macworld?10:28 AM
    • "Apple Looking For Help Triaging Maps Bug Reports"?AppleBitch?8:38 AM
    • "Is Apple Building Its Own Street View?"?Mashable?4/5
    • "Apple Devices Will Outsell Windows Devices In 2013 For The First Time Ever"?Cult of Mac?4/5
    • "iPhone vs Android: Why It Doesn't Matter"?Tapscape?4/5
    • "Apple's iRadio service completes its '2013, innovation on steroids' agenda"?Computerworld?4/5
    • "Apple Is Sweetening The Deal To Music Labels To Bring iRadio Service Online"?App Advice?4/5
    • "4 lessons for Apple in the Facebook phone"?Fortune?4/5
    • "And Privacy Kudos Of The Week Go To... Apple??"?ReadWrite?4/5
    • "Why and when the iPad is the best e-reader: For the first time in history, when we sit down to read a book, we're faced with more than simply a choice of what to read - we must also decide How To read it"?Macworld UK?4/5
    • "A $5 app isn't expensive: Customers need to help fix the App Store economy"?Macworld?4/5
    • "Silence Of The Shopping Lambs: A Few Words About How Apple Is Special, Samsung Is Not"?Mac 360?4/5
    • "Sorry. I Missed It. How Is It Again That Apple Needs To Be More Like Samsung?"?PixoBebo?4/5
    • "Facebook and Apple: it's complicated"?GigaOM?4/5
    Non-Apple
    • "Killing Off Vicious Evil Windows Malware Part 1,000,001"?Rixstep?7:09 PM
    • "Why Home won't move the needle for Facebook"?GigaOM?3:07 PM
    • "I won't pay AT&T early-termination fees"?BetaNews?3:08 PM
    • "If Microsoft Were The Inventors Of Facebook Home, They'd Have Invented Facebook Home"?ParisLemon?4/5
    • "Microsoft's Mobile Comeback Isn't Happening"?SplatF?4/5
    • "Facebook Home: You Are the Product Being Sold"?BYTE?4/5
    • "The Serious Downside To Slim Design"?iFixit?4/5
    • "Why Do We Keep Making Ebooks Like Paper Books?"?Gizmodo?4/5
    • "Xbox tweets hint at 'always on' future: Don't want a gaming console that requires a persistent Internet connection? 'Deal with it,' says Microsoft Studio's creative director"?CNET News?4/5
    • "First Ouya reviews hit the Internet: Initial reaction is ... not glowing"?Destructoid?4/5
    • "LG Optimus G Pro Review: the phone-tablets are here to stay/It's bigger and faster and, in a lot of ways, better."?Ars Technica?4/5
    • "Seven Features To Make Instagram Instantly Better"?App Advice?4/5
    • "The tip of the iceberg: Warner Instant Archive launches for fans of classic film"?AppleDailyReport?4/5
    • "Mark Zuckerberg Talks Home, the Future of Sharing and Life Outside Facebook"?Gizmodo?4/5
    • "Who's Going To Buy The Facebook Phone?"?SplatF?4/5
    • "Studios regret sending Google a list of every pirate site on the Internet for publication"?Boing Boing?4/5
    Humor/Cartoons
    • "Caturday: Ruby the programmer cat"?TUAW?11:00 AM
    • "Googlers turn Sergey Brin's Tesla into a pink Batmobile with wings and eyelashes"?Edible Apple?4/5
    Finances (Click heading for current Apple Stock price.)
    Apple News
    • "AAPL: Cowen Survey Says Upside in iPad"?Barron's?4/5
    • "Apple: It's Time to Start Believing (And Buying!), Says Jackson"?Breakout?4/5
    • "Will Steve Ballmer Giggle at Apple TV?"?TheStreet?4/5
    Industry News
    • "Stocks sink after 'cold slap' of jobs reality"?CNNMoney?4/5
    • "Stocks sink after dismal jobs report"?CNNMoney?4/5
    • "Dow Drops 100 After Jobs Data, Dragged by Techs; Vix Spikes 10%"?CNBC?4/5
    • "Jobs report: Hiring slows severely in March"?CNNMoney?4/5
    • "Stocks Plunge as Jobs Number Fans Fears"?TheStreet?4/5
    • "HP Options Traders Expect Volatility on Board Moves"?Bloomberg?4/5
    • "Goldman Sachs Cuts Hewlett-Packard to $16: Time To Jump Ship?"?Investopedia?4/5
    • "U.S. Stocks See Broad Selloff After Jobs Data"?WSJ.com [Paid Membership Required]?4/5
    • "Apple, BlackBerry, Nokia fall on latest data/Forecast from IDC sees sharp slowdown in smartphone sales growth"?MarketWatch?4/5
    • "Asia Markets: Japan stocks jump; Hong Kong hit by bird flu fears"?MarketWatch?4/5
    • "Bloodbath for Network Stocks (FFIV, JNPR, CSCO, RVBD, FTNT, CIEN, ALU)"?24/7 Wall St.?4/5
    • "Most active Nasdaq-traded stocks: Nasdaq's 10 most active stocks at 1 p.m."?Associated Press?4/5
    • "Final Glance: Computer companies/Computer companies shares down at the close of trading"?Associated Press?4/5
    • "Midday Glance: Computer companies/Computer companies shares down at 1 p.m."?Associated Press?4/5
    • "Early Glance: Computer companies/Computer companies shares down at 10 a.m."?Associated Press?4/5
    ? ?

    Source: http://www.macsurfer.com/redirr.php?u=774214

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