Sunday, October 27, 2013

iPad art gains recognition in new Hockney exhibit


SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Happily hunched over his iPad, Britain's most celebrated living artist David Hockney is pioneering in the art world again, turning his index finger into a paintbrush that he uses to swipe across a touch screen to create vibrant landscapes, colorful forests and richly layered scenes.

"It's a very new medium," said Hockney. So new, in fact, he wasn't sure what he was creating until he began printing his digital images a few years ago. "I was pretty amazed by them actually," he said, laughing. "I'm still amazed."

A new exhibit of Hockney's work, including about 150 iPad images, opened Saturday in the de Young Museum in Golden Gate Park, just a short trip for Silicon Valley techies who created both the hardware and software for this 21st-century reinvention of finger-painting.

The show is billed as the museum's largest ever, filling two floors of the de Young with a survey of works from 1999 to present, mostly landscapes and portraits in an array of mediums: watercolor, charcoal and even video. But on a recent preview day, it was the iPad pieces, especially the 12-foot high majestic views of Yosemite National Park that drew gasps.

Already captured by famed photographer Ansel Adams, and prominent painters such as Thomas Hill and Albert Bierstadt, Hockney's iPad images of Yosemite's rocks, rivers and trees are both comfortingly familiar and entirely new.

In one wide open vista, scrubby, bright green pines sparkle in sunlight, backed by Bridalveil Fall tumbling lightly down a cliff side; the distinct granite crest of Half Dome looms in the background. In another, a heavy mist obscures stands of giant sequoias.

"He has such command of space, atmosphere and light," said Fine Arts Museums director Colin Bailey.

Other iPad images are overlaid, so viewers can see them as they were drawn, an animated beginning-to-end chronological loop. He tackles faces and flowers, and everyday objects: a human foot, scissors, an electric plug.

Some of the iPad drawings are displayed on digital screens, others, like the Yosemite works, were printed on six large panels. Hockey's technical assistants used large inkjet prints reproduce the images he created on his IPad.

Exhibiting iPad images by a prominent artist in a significant museum gives the medium a boost, said art historians, helping digital artwork gain legitimacy in the notoriously snobby art world where computer tablet art shows are rare and prices typically lower than comparable watercolors or oils.

"I'm grateful he's doing this because it opens people's mind to the technology in a new way," said Long Island University Art Historian Maureen Nappi, although she described Hockney's iPad work as "gimmicky."

Writing about the historic shift of drawing from prehistoric cave painting to digital tablets in this month's MIT journal "Leonardo," Nappi said that while iPad work is still novel, the physicality of painting and drawing have gone on for millennia.

"These gestures are as old as humans are," she said in an interview. "Go back to cave paintings, they're using finger movements to articulate creative expressions."

Hockney, 76, started drawing on his iPhone with his thumb about five years ago, shooting his works via email to dozens of friends at a time.

"People from the village come up and tease me: 'We hear you've started drawing on your telephone.' And I tell them, 'Well, no, actually, it's just that occasionally I speak on my sketch pad,'" he said.

When the iPad was announced, Hockney said he had one shipped immediately to his home in London, where he splits his time with Los Angeles.

He creates his work with an app built by former Apple software engineer Steve Sprang of Mountain View, Calif., called Brushes, which along with dozens of other programs like Touch Sketch, SketchBook Mobile and Bamboo Paper are being snapped up by artists, illustrators and graphic designers.

Together, the artists are developing new finger and stylus techniques, with Hockney's vanguard work offering innovative approaches.

"David Hockney is one of the living masters of oil painting, a nearly-600-year-old technology, and thus is well positioned to have thought long and hard about the advantages of painting with a digital device like the iPad," said Binghamton University Art Historian Kevin Hatch in New York.

Hatch said a "digital turn" in the art world began about 25 years ago, as the Internet gained popularity, and he said today most artists have adapted to using a device in some way as they create art.

A similar shift happened almost 100 years ago with the dawn of photography, he said, when innovations such as the small photograph cards and the stereoscope captured the art world's imagination.

And Hatch said there are some drawbacks to the shift to tablet art.

"A certain almost magical quality of oil paint, a tactile, tangible substance, is lost when a painting becomes, at heart, a piece of code, a set of invisible 1's and 0's," he said.

Hockney, who created 78 of the almost 400 pieces in the de Young show this year, isn't giving up painting, or drawing, or video, or tablets, any time soon. When asked where he sees the world of art going, he shrugged his broad shoulders and paused.

"I don't know where it's going, really, who does?" he said. "But art will be there."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ipad-art-gains-recognition-hockney-exhibit-142603289.html
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What do we know -- and not know -- about fracking?

What do we know -- and not know -- about fracking?


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27-Oct-2013



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Contact: Kea Giles
kgiles@geosociety.org
Geological Society of America



2013 GSA Annual Meeting Pardee Keynote Sympsium




Boulder, Colo., USA - Fracking is in the headlines a lot these days, and everyone has an opinion about it. But how much do we really know for certain about the oil and gas extraction technique and its health effects? And how do we find out the truth among all the shouted opinions? To help cut through the static, several scientists have put together a multidisciplinary session on fracking and health at the meeting of The Geological Society of America (GSA) in Denver on Sunday.


"There is so much perceived information on fracking in the media, with so little of it based on real science and actual data," says Thomas Darrah, a medical geologist at Ohio State University and one of the conveners of the GSA Pardee Keynote Session, "Energy and Health: The Emergence of Medical Geology in Response to the Shale Gas Boom."


"Fracking has moved so quickly, and the research community is playing catch up on water, air, and health issues," said Robert Jackson, an environmental scientist at Duke University who will present his research this Sunday. "The goal is to present a state of the science for researchers and the public."


The afternoon keynote session is designed to cover a lot of ground. It will start with the geologists, hydrologists, and air-quality experts who are studying the chemistry and the physical properties of fracking in the ground, water, and air. Then the session veers into territory not often covered at a geological meeting, with talks by toxicologists, researchers in occupational medicine, and epidemiologists.


"This session includes people who would normally not be anywhere near a GSA conference," said Darrah. "The idea is that we end the session by having the geoscience community interact with a group of people who are looking at health data sets: epidemiologists. That way we can put people working on the other end of the equation in the same room." Included in the eleven scheduled presentations, and at the medical end of the equation, is a talk titled "Public Health Implications of Hydraulic Fracturing," by David O. Carpenter of the University of Albany's School of Public Health, and another, "Energy and Health: The Emergence of Medical Geology in Response to the Shale Gas Boom: An Occupational and Environmental Medicine Perspective," to be delivered by Theodore F. Them of Guthrie Clinic Ltd.


For his part, Darrah will be presenting a talk about his work, "Understanding In-House Exposures to Natural Gas and Metal-Rich Aerosols from Groundwater within an Unconventional Energy Basin."


There are two additional presentations on the air-quality issues of fracking, which is perhaps the topic the public knows the least about. Gabrielle Petron of the University of Colorado and NOAA will be talking about outdoor air emissions from hydraulic fracturing activities, and public health researcher Lisa M. Mackenzie of the University of Colorado will talk about work evaluating specific health risks from exposure to natural gas drilling in Garfield County, Colorado.


###


WHAT:

Session No. 64

P6. ENERGY AND HEALTH: THE EMERGENCE OF MEDICAL GEOLOGY IN RESPONSE TO THE SHALE GAS BOOM

GSA Geology and Health Division

URL: https://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2013AM/webprogram/Session33316.html


WHEN:

Sunday, 27 Oct., 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.

Colorado Convention Center, Mile High Ballroom 4CD


CONTACT:

Thomas Darrah, Ohio State University

614-688-2132, 570-205-7533

darrah.24@osu.edu


NOTE: Several other aspects of hydraulic fracturing are also being discussed at the GSA Annual Meeting, including:

Session No. 22:

Geochemistry of Flowback and Produced Waters From Hydraulically Fractured Black Shale

Sunday, 27 Oct., 8 a.m. to noon

Colorado Convention Center Room 503
https://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2013AM/webprogram/Session33299.html


Session 299:

A Comprehensive Look at Hydraulic Fracturing For Hydrocarbon Recovery and Other Purposes

Tuesday, 29 Oct., 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.

Colorado Convention Center Room 501

https://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2013AM/webprogram/Session32577.html


Search the complete program by author or keyword at https://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2013AM/webprogram/start.html.


ON-SITE NEWSROOM

Contact: Kea Giles

Colorado Convention Center, Room 608

+1-303-228-8431



The Geological Society of America, founded in 1888, is a scientific society with more than 25,000 members from academia, government, and industry in more than 100 countries. Through its meetings, publications, and programs, GSA enhances the professional growth of its members and promotes the geosciences in the service of humankind. Headquartered in Boulder, Colorado, USA, GSA encourages cooperative research among earth, life, planetary, and social scientists, fosters public dialogue on geoscience issues, and supports all levels of earth science education.


http://www.geosociety.org



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What do we know -- and not know -- about fracking?


[ Back to EurekAlert! ]

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

27-Oct-2013



[


| E-mail

]


Share Share

Contact: Kea Giles
kgiles@geosociety.org
Geological Society of America



2013 GSA Annual Meeting Pardee Keynote Sympsium




Boulder, Colo., USA - Fracking is in the headlines a lot these days, and everyone has an opinion about it. But how much do we really know for certain about the oil and gas extraction technique and its health effects? And how do we find out the truth among all the shouted opinions? To help cut through the static, several scientists have put together a multidisciplinary session on fracking and health at the meeting of The Geological Society of America (GSA) in Denver on Sunday.


"There is so much perceived information on fracking in the media, with so little of it based on real science and actual data," says Thomas Darrah, a medical geologist at Ohio State University and one of the conveners of the GSA Pardee Keynote Session, "Energy and Health: The Emergence of Medical Geology in Response to the Shale Gas Boom."


"Fracking has moved so quickly, and the research community is playing catch up on water, air, and health issues," said Robert Jackson, an environmental scientist at Duke University who will present his research this Sunday. "The goal is to present a state of the science for researchers and the public."


The afternoon keynote session is designed to cover a lot of ground. It will start with the geologists, hydrologists, and air-quality experts who are studying the chemistry and the physical properties of fracking in the ground, water, and air. Then the session veers into territory not often covered at a geological meeting, with talks by toxicologists, researchers in occupational medicine, and epidemiologists.


"This session includes people who would normally not be anywhere near a GSA conference," said Darrah. "The idea is that we end the session by having the geoscience community interact with a group of people who are looking at health data sets: epidemiologists. That way we can put people working on the other end of the equation in the same room." Included in the eleven scheduled presentations, and at the medical end of the equation, is a talk titled "Public Health Implications of Hydraulic Fracturing," by David O. Carpenter of the University of Albany's School of Public Health, and another, "Energy and Health: The Emergence of Medical Geology in Response to the Shale Gas Boom: An Occupational and Environmental Medicine Perspective," to be delivered by Theodore F. Them of Guthrie Clinic Ltd.


For his part, Darrah will be presenting a talk about his work, "Understanding In-House Exposures to Natural Gas and Metal-Rich Aerosols from Groundwater within an Unconventional Energy Basin."


There are two additional presentations on the air-quality issues of fracking, which is perhaps the topic the public knows the least about. Gabrielle Petron of the University of Colorado and NOAA will be talking about outdoor air emissions from hydraulic fracturing activities, and public health researcher Lisa M. Mackenzie of the University of Colorado will talk about work evaluating specific health risks from exposure to natural gas drilling in Garfield County, Colorado.


###


WHAT:

Session No. 64

P6. ENERGY AND HEALTH: THE EMERGENCE OF MEDICAL GEOLOGY IN RESPONSE TO THE SHALE GAS BOOM

GSA Geology and Health Division

URL: https://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2013AM/webprogram/Session33316.html


WHEN:

Sunday, 27 Oct., 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.

Colorado Convention Center, Mile High Ballroom 4CD


CONTACT:

Thomas Darrah, Ohio State University

614-688-2132, 570-205-7533

darrah.24@osu.edu


NOTE: Several other aspects of hydraulic fracturing are also being discussed at the GSA Annual Meeting, including:

Session No. 22:

Geochemistry of Flowback and Produced Waters From Hydraulically Fractured Black Shale

Sunday, 27 Oct., 8 a.m. to noon

Colorado Convention Center Room 503
https://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2013AM/webprogram/Session33299.html


Session 299:

A Comprehensive Look at Hydraulic Fracturing For Hydrocarbon Recovery and Other Purposes

Tuesday, 29 Oct., 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.

Colorado Convention Center Room 501

https://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2013AM/webprogram/Session32577.html


Search the complete program by author or keyword at https://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2013AM/webprogram/start.html.


ON-SITE NEWSROOM

Contact: Kea Giles

Colorado Convention Center, Room 608

+1-303-228-8431



The Geological Society of America, founded in 1888, is a scientific society with more than 25,000 members from academia, government, and industry in more than 100 countries. Through its meetings, publications, and programs, GSA enhances the professional growth of its members and promotes the geosciences in the service of humankind. Headquartered in Boulder, Colorado, USA, GSA encourages cooperative research among earth, life, planetary, and social scientists, fosters public dialogue on geoscience issues, and supports all levels of earth science education.


http://www.geosociety.org



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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.




Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-10/gsoa-wdw102313.php
Category: OS X Mavericks   yosemite national park   Anna Gunn   Amber Riley   Victoria Duval  

Say goodbye to internal "SuperDrives" with the latest MacBook Pro refresh

Say goodbye to internal "SuperDrives" with the latest MacBook Pro refresh

It's the end of an era. At Tuesday's iPad and Mac Event, Apple refreshed the MacBook Pro with Retina Display with Intel's fourth-generation "Haswell" Core processors and other enhancements. In the process, the company quietly put to bed the last remaining Mac computers that include an internal "SuperDrive."

For now, the "standard" $1,199 13-inch MacBook Pro - with SuperDrive - remains available to order through the Apple Store, but no mention of it is apparent on Apple's product web site (except for an unobtrusive link that I missed until it was pointed out to me). It's a legacy product, as well - untouched since it was last refreshed in 2012.

When Apple introduced the iMac in 1998, it shocked many for its absence of a floppy disk - indeed, the first Mac not to have a floppy disk drive as standard equipment, ever. At the time, naysayers in the industry thought that Apple had jumped the gun. Floppy disks had been standard issue on computers for years - a common delivery medium for software installers and an indispensible tool for "sneakernet" - the colloquial term used to describe physically moving files from one computer to another by copying them to a floppy.

But Apple doubled down, pulling floppy drives from all of its machines, eventually replacing them with "SuperDrives" - optical drives capable of reading and writing CD and DVD media.

SuperDrives remained a mainstay of the Mac product line until last year, but the first cracks in the armor appeared in 2008, when Apple introduced the first MacBook Air. The diminutive MacBook Air was too slender to accommodate an internal optical drive, and for a few years, anyway, it would remain an anachronism - the one Mac that didn't have any internal optical storage.

Fast-forward to 2011 and the Mac mini, which was refreshed mid-year and was the first Mac mini model (outside of Apple's server model) to lose the optical drive. Then in 2012 Apple introduced MacBook Pros with Retina Displays and iMacs, all of which got rid of the drives.

When the old "cheese grater"-style aluminum Mac Pro got discontinued earlier this year, that left two machines in Apple's product line with internal optical drives: both "standard" MacBook Pros.

Apple envisions its customers as less and less dependent on optical media thanks to the increasing availability of fast Internet connections. And the world has definitely moved in that direction - fewer of us rent DVD movies, we stream them from Netflix or rent them from iTunes and other services. Fewer of us buy software on disc, we download it from the Mac App Store and other services. Even as a backup and archival medium, optical drives are coming up short. With hundreds of GB to back up, you're better off using an external hard drive.

That's not to say there's no need for optical storage anymore, and that's why Apple continues to offer an external USB-based SuperDrive (the Mac works with any number of cheap commodity CD/DVD burners available from online retailers, too). But Apple's decided the optical drive is just no longer mandatory equipment. Design plays into every decision that Apple makes, too, so excising the drive makes it possible for them to build slimmer and smaller devices as well.

Now it's down to one last Mac with an optical drive: the entry-level MacBook Pro. And I bet that won't be around for too long. Without getting any sort of refresh, the $1,199 MacBook Pro is relegated to legacy model status and won't be long for this world.

Will we miss SuperDrives once they're gone for good? It didn't take us too long to adapt to life without floppy drives. I think we'll be able to handle this transition just fine.

What do you think? Do you still need to burn discs, or read optical media? Is Apple making as strategic error by getting rid of SuperDrives? Sound off in the comments.


    






Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/HNt1hwtayY4/story01.htm
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Hugh Hefner And Crystal Harris Do Hallowe’en 2013 Right



The MTV VMAs Live On In Infamy...





Earlier today we got a look at one celebrity Hallowe’en costume that was just an epic fail all over the place. Julianne Hough had the brilliant idea of going as Crazy Eyes from Orange Is The New Black, but forgot that it is no longer appropriate/was never appropriate for people to wear blackface. But now we have a couple of celebs who know how to do Hallowe’en right. Hugh Hefner and his wife Crystal Harris decided to go as a couple of other celebs who had a pretty ginormous year. Click inside for a better look!


Because Nothing’s Scarier Than Miley Cyrus And Robin Thicke At The VMAs:





 



 

LMAO, I love it! And I suspect we’ll see a lot of these this year. Folks, this is how you do Hallowe’en, okay?


There’s also something really funnyabout Hef and Crystal being dressed up as Robin and Miley– awkward pairings and male/female age gaps all around, right? No, but really. Cute costumes y’all.


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Tags: Bosses Day   Eminem Rap God   Niall Horan   Blurred Lines Lyrics   Sean Sasser  

YOUTUBE drops needle on iRadio, Spotify -- GOOGLE flies banner ads -- WOZ doesn't need Air -- HP entering 3D printing -- 'Cloud Corridor'? Really?


October 24, 2013 06:00 PDT | 09:00 EDT | 13:00 UTC


Not a TechBrief subscriber? Sign up for a free subscription.


>> COMING ATTRACTIONS: YouTube close to launching subscription music service, by Alex Pham: "YouTube is preparing a premium on-demand music service -- akin to a Spotify, but with video -- to launch later this year... designed with mobile listening in mind, will have a free component and a premium tier that offers unlimited access to a full catalog of tracks similar to what's already available via YouTube's parent company, Google Inc., via its All Access subscription music service. Premium features would include the ability to cache music for offline listening and removing ads. The free tier is likely to be unlimited, on-demand access to full tracks on all platforms, including mobile... In that sense, the paid tier is more of a 'soft sell' as YouTube's primary goal is to continue to amass ears and eyes to its mobile platform to sell ads." Billboard


>> STAT DU JOUR: Apple has sold 170M iPads to date, implying sales near 15M in Sept. quarter, by Neil Hughes: "Though many customers were waiting for Tuesday's announcement of new iPads, Apple still managed to ship near 15 million units in the September quarter, new data provided by the company implies." Apple Insider
>>>> Why would anyone buy an iPad 2 now? The Verge
>>>> Whither liberal arts? The missing iPad story Stratechery
>>>> Steve Wozniak bashes iPad Air: "I don't want one" Macworld UK
>>>> T-Mobile goes tablet crazy: Offers free 200MB monthly data, $0 down for all tablets (including iPad Air) Venture Beat
>>>> How to get the most money for your old iPad TechHive


>> THE FLAK DOTH PROTEST TOO MUCH: Microsoft exec scoffs at talk that Apple's free iWork threatens Office, by Gregg Keizer: "Microsoft's head of communications took shots today at Apple's decision to give away its iWork productivity software, calling the move 'an attempt to catch up... Seems like the RDF (Reality Distortion Field) typically generated by an Apple event has extended beyond Cupertino,' [Frank] Shaw wrote. 'So let me try to clear some things up.'" Computerworld
>>>> Apples and oranges, by Frank Shaw Official Microsoft Blog
>>>> Microsoft tries to discredit iWork as competition, but ends up looking desperate Cult of Mac
>>>> "Non-standard" Any gains in iWork usage are just icing on the cake for Apple -- but any corresponding loss in Office ... is very bad news for Microsoft. Daring Fireball
>>>> Apple's free software is the ultimate fragmentation fighter Time
>>>> Apple's new iWork apps are great, but iCloud sharing has some serious flaws CITEworld


>> TROLL TRAP: Finally, a bill to end patent trolling, by Joe Mullin: "The chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, Rep. Bob Goodlatte, has introduced a bill that directly attacks the business model of 'patent trolls.' The bill has a real chance at passing, with wide backing from leadership in both parties." Ars Technica
>> Stop patent trolls. Support the Innovation Act of 2013 EFF


>> RICKROLL: Google testing huge banner ads for branded queries, by Barry Schwartz: "In 2005, Google promised that banner ads would never come to web search, saying: There will be no banner ads on the Google homepage or web search results pages. There will not be crazy, flashy, graphical doodads flying and popping up all over the Google site. Ever. Eight years later, it seems Google may be ready to break that promise." Search Engine Land


>> MASHUP: LinkedIn Intro embeds professional profiles into Mail for iOS, by Susie Ochs: "... places a strip of LinkedIn profile information on every email you receive in the default Mail app for iOS. So if you get an email from someone you don't know, you can see at a glance their headshot, company, and title, with a handy button to let you add them to your LinkedIn network with one tap... You can link Intro to your Gmail, Google Apps, Yahoo Mail, AOL Mail, and iCloud -- no Exchange support at the moment." Macworld
>>>> Intro, an email-based stalking tool VentureBeat
>>>> LinkedIn releases revamped iPad app one day after iPad Air launch SlashGear
>>>> "The new LinkedIn iPad app is a godawful mess. Bizarrely organized, junky design, hard to parse. Unusable and unhelpful. Deleted." @MobileGalen


>> ENTER GORILLA: HP to enter 3D printer market in mid-2014, by Simon Sharwood: "HP CEO Meg Whitman has told the Canalys Channels Forum in Bangkok that the company will enter the 3D printer market in the middle of 2014. 'We are excited about 3D printing,' Whitman said, adding that it is a natural business for HP to enter given its heritage in printers. 'We want to lead this businesses. HP labs is looking at it.'" The Register


>> THEY'VE GONE TO PLAID: The fastest Internet ever is encased in a laser beam pipeline to the moon, by Becky Ferreira: "Now, the lunar orbiter has helped set a new record for high-speed Internet. Starting on October 17, scientists at the Goddard Space Flight Center have been running NASA's very first laser communication tests. They've successfully transmitted data over the 239,000 miles between their ground stations and LADEE at a record-breaking 622 megabits/second download speed. That's right: the fastest Internet connection in the world right now is actually not in this world. It's encased in a laser-beam pipeline between the moon and Earth." Motherboard


>> BUBBLE WATCH: Pinterest does another massive funding -- $225M at $3.8B valuation, by Kara Swisher and Liz Gannes: "While comScore showed Pinterest had 24.9 million unique monthly users in September, that is only in the United States and is desktop only. As AllThingsD previously reported, in March alone, after mobile and international is added, it had close to 50 million unique monthly users worldwide." AllThingsD


>> DEPARTURE LOUNGE: Dadi Perlmutter to leave Intel early next year, by Arik Hesseldahl: "Perlmutter, who heads up Intel's Architecture group, the business unit that designs and manufacturers its chips that go into personal computers, servers and other devices, will leave the company in February... had been a leading but unsuccessful contender in the race to succeed former CEO Paul Otellini." AllThingsD


>> Tech companies are trying to rename downtown San Francisco the "Cloud Corridor" Buzzfeed


>> Former Apple CEO Sculley mulls BlackBerry bid The Globe and Mail


>> Deathmatch review: Windows 8.1 vs. OS X Mavericks InfoWorld


>> Windows 8.1: The key security improvements InfoWorld


>> Microsoft keeps the Azure hits coming InfoWorld


>> Scott Berkun's open letter to new Microsoft CEO & the problem with competitive advantage Business of Software


>> Analysis of new Mac Pro video shows how it's assembled in the US 9to5Mac


>> HP Chromebook 11: Pretty, cheap, and incredibly frustrating CITEWorld


>> China's Alibaba to expand U.S. reach with new investment group PCWorld


>> ICANN starts rolling out new generic top-level domains in Arabic, Chinese, and Cyrillic scripts PCWorld


>> Secrets and lies: A coding cover-up InfoWorld


>> HP said to be seeking to sell Mobile patents Bloomberg


>> Use MongoDB to make your app location-aware InfoWorld


>> AngularJS dumps old browsers, cozies up to new frameworks InfoWorld


>> Coursera partners with 13 institutions to pass 100 total, sees over 5 million students and over 500 courses too TNW


>> TWEET O' THE DAY (BROGRAMMER EDITION): "Event supposed to be for entrepreneurs, VCs, but these heels (I've seen several like this) ... WTF? #brainsnotrequired pic.twitter.com/Z1vBKxlLzo" @jorgecortell


FEED ME, SEYMOUR: Comments? Questions? Tips? Shoot mail to Trent or Woody. Follow @gegax or @woodyleonhard.


Pass it on. Tweet us!


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Source: http://akamai.infoworld.com/t/technology-business/youtube-drops-needle-iradio-spotify-google-flies-banner-ads-woz-doesnt-need-air-hp-entering-3d-printing?source=rss_business_intelligence
Related Topics: Celia Cruz   Cricinfo   Ian Somerhalder   breast cancer awareness   K Michelle  

In NSA spying scandal, outrage but calculation too

German Chancellor Angela Merkel, center, opens coalition talks with representatives of the Social Democrats in Berlin, Germany, Wednesday, Oct. 23, 2013. Merkel on Wednesday launched coalition negotiations with the main opposition Social Democrats, SPD, that are likely to set the stage for weeks of hard bargaining to form a new government. (AP Photo/Michael Sohn)







German Chancellor Angela Merkel, center, opens coalition talks with representatives of the Social Democrats in Berlin, Germany, Wednesday, Oct. 23, 2013. Merkel on Wednesday launched coalition negotiations with the main opposition Social Democrats, SPD, that are likely to set the stage for weeks of hard bargaining to form a new government. (AP Photo/Michael Sohn)







(AP) — U.S. allies knew that the Americans were spying on them, but they had no idea how much.

As details of National Security Agency spying programs have become public through former contractor Edward Snowden, citizens, activists and politicians in countries from Latin America to Europe have lined up to express shock and outrage at the scope of what Washington may know about them.

But politicians are also using the threat to their citizens' privacy to drum up their numbers at the polls — or to distract attention from their own domestic problems. Some have even downplayed the matter to keep good relations with Washington.

After a Paris newspaper reported the NSA had swept up 70.3 million French telephone records in a 30-day period, the French government called the U.S. ambassador in for an explanation and put the issue of personal data protection on the agenda of the European Union summit that opens Thursday.

But the official French position —that friendly nations should not spy on each another — can't be taken literally, a former French foreign minister says.

"The magnitude of the eavesdropping is what shocked us," Bernard Kouchner said Tuesday in a radio interview. "Let's be honest, we eavesdrop too. Everyone is listening to everyone else. But we don't have the same means as the United States, which makes us jealous. And it's a bit of a game to discover the eavesdropping among intelligence services, even though the services — especially the Americans and the French — work together quite efficiently."

The French government, which until this week had been largely silent in the face of widespread U.S. snooping on its territory, may have had other reasons to speak out. The furor over the NSA managed to draw media attention away from France's controversial expulsion of a Roma family at a time when French President Francois Hollande's popularity is at a historic low. Just 23 percent of French approve of the job he is doing, according to a poll released last weekend.

In Germany, opposition politicians, the media and privacy activists have been vocal in their outrage over reported widescale U.S. eavesdropping — but not Chancellor Angela Merkel. She has worked hard to contain the damage to U.S.-German relations and refrained from saying anything bad about the Americans.

The German leader has expressed surprise at the scope of U.S. data collection efforts but also said her country was "dependent" on cooperation with the American spy agencies. It was thanks to "tips from American sources," she said, that security services were able to foil an Islamic terror plot in 2007 that targeted U.S. soldiers and citizens in Germany with an explosive equivalent to 900 pounds of TNT.

Still, to fend off criticism by the opposition and the media, Merkel raised the electronic eavesdropping issue when President Barack Obama visited Germany in June, demanded answers from the U.S. government, and backed calls for greater data protection at a European level.

Few countries have responded as angrily to U.S. spying than Brazil. President Dilma Rousseff took the extremely rare diplomatic step of canceling a visit to Washington where she had been scheduled to receive a full state dinner this week.

Analysts say the anger is genuine, though also politically profitable for Rousseff, who faces an increasingly competitive re-election campaign next year. Her strong stance against the United States can only help her standing with the more left-wing elements of her ruling Workers Party.

David Fleischer, a political scientist at the University of Brasilia, said since the Sept. 11 attacks in the U.S., it was "well known by Brazilian governments" that the Americans had stepped up spying efforts.

"But what the government did not know was that Dilma's office had been hacked as well, and this is what caused the outrage," Fleischer said.

Information the NSA collected in Mexico appears to have largely focused on drug fighting policies or government personnel trends. But the U.S. agency also allegedly spied on the emails of two Mexican presidents, Enrique Pena Nieto, the incumbent, and Felipe Calderon, the former head of state.

The Mexican government has reacted cautiously to those revelations, calling the targeting of the presidents "unacceptable" and "illegitimate" yet its statements haven't been accompanied by any real action. Pena Nieto has demanded an investigation but hasn't cancelled any visits or contacts, a strategy that Mexico's opposition and some analysts see as weak and submissive.

"Other countries, like Brazil, have had responses that are much more resounding than our country," said Sen. Gabriela Cuevas of Mexico's conservative National Action Party.

In part, this is because of Mexico's much-closer economic and political ties to the United States, which the Mexican government apparently does not want to endanger.

"It is true that we depend a lot more on the United States; Brazil is further away," Mexican columnist Guadalupe Loaeza wrote Tuesday.

Beyond politics, the NSA espionage has been greeted with relative equanimity in Mexico, whose people are long used to the government's extremely close intelligence cooperation with the United States in the war against the drug cartels.

"The country we should really be spying on now is New Zealand, to see if we can get enough information so the national team can win a qualifying berth at the World Cup," Loaeza wrote, referring to the Nov. 13 game between the two rivals.

__

Hinnant reported from Paris. AP writers Frank Jordans in Berlin, Stan Lehman in Sao Paulo and Mark Stevenson in Mexico City also contributed.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-10-23-EU-US-Allies-Spying/id-b809662abbb6481a8d43cf1703aa2f56
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Dennis Coffey On World Cafe





Courtesy of the artist


Dennis Coffey.


Courtesy of the artist





  • "I'm Gone" by Vic Gallon

  • "Cloud Nine" by The Temptations

  • "Scorpio"



The Motor City's own Dennis Coffey joins us for this installment of Sense of Place: Detroit. The veteran musician holds strong ties to the city's R&B and soul sound. As a guitarist and producer, Coffey spent a good amount of time in Motown's Studio A, which artists dubbed "the snake pit."


On Wednesday's episode of World Cafe, Coffey talks with host David Dye about getting on producer Norman Whitfield's good side at Motown after playing the wah-wah pedal in the classic opening of The Temptations' "Cloud Nine." Coffey also takes a moment to describe the creation of his huge instrumental hit, "Scorpio."


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/WorldCafe/2013/10/23/240278339/dennis-coffey-on-world-cafe?ft=1&f=
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