Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Engadget goes ghost hunting -- exploring the gadgetry of paranormal investigation (video)

DNP Ghost Hunting with Engadget, exploring the gadgetry of paranormal investigation

The rendezvous point is as nondescript as these things come -- a giant convenience store off the side of the freeway, a big cardboard box out front, filled to the brim with pumpkins in anticipation of the upcoming holiday. Stacey Jones approaches us timidly at first, calling my name in our direction, as two of the crew members puff on cigarettes in the unseasonably frigid air. She'd apparently mistaken some other folks for us a moment earlier, a group of college students in hoodies and baseball caps, and is clearly a little embarrassed by the whole experience. It's the first and last time words like "timid" and "embarrassed" can be accurately applied to a middle-aged mother of an adult son who hunts ghosts for a living in central New York State. Group identified, she announces, "We'd better get going. It'll take about an hour to get there." Disappointing news, after the five it took to get to this roadside rest stop. But we nod and smile and get back in our respective cars.

She's careful not to reveal the location until we arrive, for concerns of privacy. I've studied her a bit online. A self-described "ghost cop," YouTube is littered with videos of her leading camera crews through abandoned hospitals, in search of dead people apparently desperate to relate some bit of information to her. The location, however, isn't as classically horror movie as we'd imagined or hoped in the car ride up. It's quite idyllic, really -- a beautiful 100-year-old building off the side of the road, 200 yards from a truly stunning old church. Outside the front door, a small signboard advertises a monthly waffle breakfast.

Decidedly more ominous are the two graveyards that flank the buildings, with tombstones dating back to the early 19th century, generations of farmers under the ground that may well outnumber residents in this sparsely populated locale. The weather, too, is doing its part to set the scene -- strange, gray clouds hanging low in impossible shapes. "The light," says one of the crew members, as we park and begin the unpacking process. "It's...oversaturated." Sounds seem to travel remarkably well in the cold, crisp, pre-storm air. I step across the road with the show producer, to gather b-roll of 150-year-old headstones, still able to hear every word that Stacey says, as she describes her entry into this strange and oft-maligned world, how her son became possessed by demonic forces on an investigation in a graveyard as a teenager. It's a story she'd recount for the Discovery Channel five years ago, coupled with basic cable dramatizations, portrayed by actors bearing slightly resemblances to their real world counterparts, if you're willing to afford them the advantage of a good squint.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/10/31/ghost-hunting/

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Fun Thanksgiving Activity for Grandkids | Grandparenting through ...

Thanksgiving is just around the corner! If you?re like me, your family probably has many different traditions that help bring you closer together and, at the same time, help pass along your faith. There is one special tradition of my family?s that I?d love to share with you. This is an easy craft, one that grandkids of any age can participate in, and one you can do whether your grandkids live near or far.

Our family calls this the Thanksgiving Blessing Tree, although some refer to it as the Thankful Tree. There are many variations of how to create the tree, and there is no right or wrong way. You can be as simple, fancy, or as creative as you and your grandkids want to be!

You can form your tree out of construction paper or cardboard by cutting a trunk and branches out of either material. I used cardboard so it would last longer. Either way, if you want a large tree that you can put on your refrigerator or against a wall, you?ll need to piece together several sections of branches and a trunk. Once that is formed, make leaves from various fall colors of construction paper. (See image below from www.ecenglish.com.)

Another idea for making your tree?and one that will surely endure the ages?is to use an actual tree branches, turning one branch sideways to create the trunk. Or, form a trunk and branches out of wire simply by twisting wire pieces of branches together to wrap and bend around the trunk. With either method, insert the trunk into a sand or gravel-filled pot, and use construction paper or craft foam for the leaves. To hang the leaves, punch a hole in the ?stem? then create a loop with yarn or thread to go through the hole and around the branches. (See image below from www.spoonful.com.)

Now, your part is done! Your grandkids? job is to either create their own leaves or use ones that you provide and write on them the various ways that God has blessed them during the past year. You can do this on Thanksgiving Day when your grandkids are with you, or have them mail you their finished leaves if they live far away. Be sure they put their name on the leaves if you have more than one grandchild, perhaps a picture of themselves, and date each leaf with the year.

If you have several grandkids, you?ll have a very full tree after only a few years. But what a great way to count God?s blessings throughout your family and to see a touching reminder every year of how God is moving in your family?s life!

If you have special traditions or similar crafts you?d like to share with our readers, please let us know about them.

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Source: http://grandparentingthruobstacles.wordpress.com/2012/10/30/fun-thanksgiving-activity-for-grandkids/

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When tweets repeat a lie

?BREAKING: Confirmed flooding on NYSE. The trading floor is flooded under more than 3 feet of water.?

That tweet, made during the height of superstorm Sandy earlier this week, quickly swept through the Twitterverse. CNN mentioned it. So did The Washington Post.

But it wasn?t true.

IN PICTURES: Sandy: Chronicle of an unrelenting storm

Social media such as Twitter serve as a great resource for keeping in touch with friends and family in real time during emergencies. Even when power is out and TVs go dark, a smart phone maintains a link to the outside world.

Social media sites have shown they can trump traditional news sources in getting to the latest twist in an ongoing story. The ?citizen journalists? who tweet about what they are seeing help the rest of us understand what?s happening in an emergency or in a war zone where few journalists are allowed, such as Syria. (See ?Syria?s YouTube ?war? could win the war.?)

But what if someone decides to tweet a lie?

That?s what happened in New York this week when a Twitter account called ?Comfortablysmug? sent out a lie about the New York Stock Exchange being underwater that was picked up and retweeted more than 600 times, as well as mentioned in the traditional news media.

As the report?s credibility began to erode, it didn?t take long for the blog BuzzFeed to manage to track down the person behind the bogus tweet, Shashank Tripathi, campaign manager for New York congressional candidate Christopher Wright (though the tweet didn?t seem to have any political motive behind it). Mr. Tripathi later offered a ?sincere, humble, and unconditional? apology and has resigned from his post.

Tripathi wasn?t the only prankster. Fake photos on Facebook, Twitter, and other photo-sharing sites showed pictures of divers purportedly in a flooded New York subway tunnel and a sinking Statue of Liberty (the actual source of the latter picture was the disaster movie ?The Day After Tomorrow?). A photo that was briefly on the Washington Post website showed soldiers bravely guarding the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in a pelting rainstorm (the photo turned out to have been taken in September).

?Trolls are part of the culture of the Internet. Some people get a kick out of spreading this stuff,? the Post?s social media producer said.

What, if anything, can be done about people who pollute a valuable new stream of information? In extreme cases legal action might be brought against an individual. Peter Vallone Jr., a New York City councilman, says he?s asked the Manhattan district attorney to look into filing charges against Tripathi. But that seems more like a warning meant to scold a prankster than a serious legal action.

Even lies are protected as free speech, at least those short of meeting the ?yelling ?fire? in a crowded theater? test.

IN PICTURES: Sandy: Chronicle of an unrelenting storm

The challenge for news-gathering organizations continues to be how to balance the tremendous resource of text and photo postings by ordinary citizens with the news gatherers? duty to authenticate these ?reports.? In some cases a quick phone call can do the job.

To some extent, people reading tweets and Facebook or other posts about a fast-moving news event must become their own editors: Do I have this information from more than one independent source? Is this a known or trusted source? Should I wait to retweet it until I?m sure it?s accurate ? or at least accompany my retweet with a skeptical ?I don?t know if this is true? disclaimer?

The good news is that social media such as Twitter and Facebook remain an immensely helpful new way to communicate during emergencies. And more good news: The same citizen media that first spread Tripathi?s lie have shown that they have a powerful, self-correcting ability as the truth becomes known.

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/tweets-repeat-lie-193729639--politics.html

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Awesome Window Treatments You Can Make at Home | 1st Choice ...

Window treatments can be extremely expensive, and if you have a large amount of windows in your home that need treatments, you could end up spending a pretty penny to accomplish this.

Luckily there are many DIY options that you can easily make at home. Not only can making your own window treatments save you a boatload of money, but it also allows you to customize your treatments to match your home?s d?cor.

The following are five window treatments that you can easily make at home.

Caf? Curtains

Caf? curtains are those curtains usually found in kitchens. These curtains tend to cover only the bottom half of the window and allow you to look out the top half. You can easily make caf? curtains at home with minimal sewing. Simply purchase a fabric that you like and fold and sew the edges so that it does not fray. Then, pop some curtain rod holders through the fabric, and hang the curtains on a curtain rod. You now have your own easily made caf? curtains to adorn the windows in your kitchen. (PS: you can also do this for longer curtains too.)

Stencils

Instead of paying for a style of curtain you like, you can always buy plain white curtains and decorate them yourself. Simply pick up a stencil of a design you like (or create your own stencil with cardboard) and some fabric paint, and stencil your own design on the curtains. You can easily add some great design elements to plain curtains and make them match any d?cor at a very cheap price.

Shades

If you are using shades, you don?t have to stick with boring old white or beige, and you don?t have to pay a fortune for a color either. You can easily create your own shades. Purchase a regular shade for your window, and then purchase a fabric you love. Then, simply adhere the fabric to your shade using a spray adhesive. This is a great way to class up boring shades and add some design elements to your room. (PS: if you?re having trouble using fabric, you can always opt to use wallpaper instead.)

Beads

If you have a room in your home that has windows that don?t need privacy, such as windows that are high or are found in a room you don?t use often, use beads instead of traditional window treatments. Adhere strands of beads or jewels to curtain holders and attach them to a curtain rod. This is a very simple and very elegant way to dress up a window.

Frosted Vinyl

Frosted vinyl is an easy way to add window treatments to a room that needs both light and privacy, such as bathrooms. You can purchase frosted vinyl window film at any major home improvement store and adhere it to your windows yourself. Plus, if you ever get tired of it, frosted vinyl comes off pretty easy without damaging your windows.

?There is no reason to spend a large sum of money on window treatments that you can easily make yourself. If you have windows in your home that need dressing, opt to use one of these options to help complement your d?cor and save you money.

Prepared thanks to the guidance of Moshells. Moshells offers a wide selection of affordable microsuede drapes.

from your own site.

Source: http://www.1st-choice-homes.com/awesome-window-treatments-you-can-make-at-home/

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19 workers trapped in New York power plant by storm, witness says

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Caribbean 'Race of Champions' Meet?Beharry Automotive joins ...

?

Their reputation in the automotive industry is second to none and likewise their support for the motor racing fraternity.
Beharry Automotive Limited recently maintained its close relationship with the Guyana Motor Racing & Sports Club (GMR&SC) after making a significant contribution via sponsorship of the season ending Caribbean ?Race of Champions? Meet which is scheduled to be staged on November 11, at the South Dakota Circuit.
Club Manager Rayon Samaroo received a cheque for an undisclosed sum from Beharry?s representative Aaron Josiah at the Company?s location on Charlotte Street.

Beharry Automotive Ltd Accountant Aaron Josiah (left) hands over the sponsorship cheque to GMR&SC?s Manager Rayon Samaroo recently.

Samaroo thanked the Company for its sustained patronage towards the motor racing industry and promised that the Meet will be of a high standard and exciting races will be witnessed in every category among the best drivers, riders and karters in the Region.
Last year Barbados became the first country to hold both the driver and country titles and they?ve already indicated that they will be sending a strong team to represent the ?Land of the Flying Fish?.
Among them are current Caribbean king Roger Mayers and Doug and Mark Maloney.
Currently, Jamaica leads the points standing with 113 points followed by Barbados on 64, Cayman Islands lies third on 26 and Guyana in the cellar on 21.
In the battle for individual supremacy, Summerbell, after copping a second and two third place finishes in Barbados, maintains his lead in the drivers? Championship after six races, with 50 points and he will be supported by Peter Rae and Andre Anderson.
Guyana will be relying on Mark and Paul Vieira, Andrew King, Kevin Jeffrey and Vishok Persaud to thwart the challenges of the opposition.
Guyanese riders have so far dominated the Super bike category and their dominance is expected to continue, especially since Stephen Vieira, Carlos Rodrigues, Joel Neblett and Carey Griffith will want to put on a treat for the home fans.

Source: http://www.kaieteurnewsonline.com/2012/10/31/caribbean-race-of-champions-meet-beharry-automotive-joins-growing-list-of-sponsors/

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Waze updated with pick-up request and social features

Android Central

The Waze navigation app has recently been updated with a whole bunch of new social features, ranging from seeing the ETA of your friends, location sharing, pick-up requests, and lots more. Here's the full changelog for Waze 3.5.

  • See friends driving to your destination & everyone's ETA
  • Send a pick up request to grab anyone's location & navigate to them
  • Share your drive by sending a live map of your route & ETA to anyone
  • New design and UI throughout
  • Sign in with Facebook
  • Nearing destination bar
  • Toll road usage indication
  • Private messages
  • Parking location pin

As always, Waze continues to offer croudsourced mapping data, live traffic alerts, points of interest searching, finding the best gas prices, and the usual voice-based turn-by-turn navigation.

The new features are pretty sweet, especially being able to request a pick-up, even if you don't use Waze. Still, it seems like the majority of Waze's new features depend on other friends using the same app, which can be hard to count on for less regular meet-ups. 

Any active Waze users out there? How often do you think you'll use the friends ETA feature? Anything else new that's really leaping out? 

read more



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/6jMkk64AEFI/story01.htm

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Texas pastor fatally beaten was 'man of integrity'

People comfort one another outside of the Greater Sweethome Missionary Baptist Church, Monday, Oct. 29, 2012, in Forest Hill, Texas, after the church's founding pastor was killed Monday by an attacker who rammed a car into a church wall, chased the pastor and beat him with an electric guitar, according to police. (AP Photo/Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Pauly Moseley) MAGS OUT (FORT WORTH WEEKLY, 360 WEST); INTERNET OUT

People comfort one another outside of the Greater Sweethome Missionary Baptist Church, Monday, Oct. 29, 2012, in Forest Hill, Texas, after the church's founding pastor was killed Monday by an attacker who rammed a car into a church wall, chased the pastor and beat him with an electric guitar, according to police. (AP Photo/Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Pauly Moseley) MAGS OUT (FORT WORTH WEEKLY, 360 WEST); INTERNET OUT

Hundreds of distraught church members gather at the Greater Sweethome Missionary Baptist Church, Monday, Oct. 29, 2012, in Forest Hill, Texas, after the church's founding pastor was killed Monday by an attacker who rammed a car into a church wall, chased the pastor and beat him with an electric guitar, according to police. (AP Photo/Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Pauly Moseley) MAGS OUT (FORT WORTH WEEKLY, 360 WEST); INTERNET OUT

An investigator looks over a car that was crashed into the Greater Sweethome Missionary Baptist Church in Forest Hill, Texas, Monday, Oct. 29, 2012. Forest Hill Police Chief Dan Dennis says the pastor of the church is dead after the driver of the car crashed into the building and began to assault him. Dennis said officers arrived Monday afternoon at the Greater Sweethome Missionary Baptist Church to find an assault in progress. Dennis says the suspected attacker also later died shortly after being detained. (AP Photo/LM Otero)

Crime scene tape surrounds Greater Sweethome Missionary Baptist Church in Forest Hill, Texas Monday, Oct. 29, 2012, as Forest Hill Police investigate the beating death of pastor Danny Kirk, Sr. Authorities say Kirk died after a man drove his car into the church and attacked the pastor with an electric guitar. (AP Photo/The Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Paul Moseley) MAGS OUT; (FORT WORTH WEEKLY, 360 WEST); INTERNET OUT

One woman comforts another at the Greater Sweethome Missionary Baptist Church, Monday, Oct. 29, 2012, in Forest Hill, Texas, after the church's founding pastor was killed Monday by an attacker who rammed a car into a church wall, chased the pastor and beat him with an electric guitar, according to police. (AP Photo/Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Pauly Moseley) MAGS OUT (FORT WORTH WEEKLY, 360 WEST); INTERNET OUT

(AP) ? Rev. Danny Kirk Sr. greeted everyone walking into his Texas church on Sundays with a big hug and an "I love you." His weekdays were spent visiting folks in the hospital or mowing lawns and doing household repairs for members in need.

Parishioners, who described Kirk as a dedicated minister with a bubbly personality and a knack for remembering the names of his church's 800 members, are now looking for answers following his violent death.

Police in the Fort Worth suburb of Forest Hill said Kirk was killed Monday by a man who rammed a car into a wall at his Greater Sweethome Missionary Baptist Church, then chased Kirk and fatally beat him with an electric guitar.

Investigators said they don't know the motive or if Kirk knew his attacker, who police subdued by using a Taser but died after being taken into custody. His name hasn't been released.

Hundreds of people gathered outside the church, where crime-scene tape was wrapped around a small statue of Jesus near the wrecked car. Some hugged each other and cried, while others shared memories of Kirk.

"He really was concerned about our souls," Montoya McNeil, a church member for eight years, said as she wiped away tears. "You looked forward to being here. ... I'm not asking God why, because I know where he (Kirk) is, but we won't get those big bear hugs and those great sermons anymore."

Claudie Loftin, an associate minister, called Kirk a hands-on pastor who "didn't run around wearing a suit.

"He would wear jeans or a sweatsuit because he said he never knew how he would be needed to help, and that's what a pastor does. He was a man of integrity."

Forest Hill Police Chief Dan Dennis said the suspect drove his car into a church wall before noon Monday, apparently on purpose. The suspect got out of the car and began to attack the pastor in the parking lot before chasing him into the church, while the secretary hid and called 911, Dennis said.

Police arrived to find the suspect assaulting Kirk with an electric guitar from inside the church, Dennis said. An officer used a Taser on the suspect, handcuffed him and put him in the back of a patrol car.

By then, Kirk had died, Dennis said. A maintenance worker who tried to help Kirk was injured and taken to an area hospital. His condition was unknown.

Dennis said the suspect was found unresponsive shortly after being detained and was pronounced dead at a local hospital. Kirk fought back during the attack, Dennis said, but it's unclear if that played any role in the suspect's death. An autopsy was being performed on the suspect to determine the cause of death.

Dennis said he didn't know if the suspect knew Kirk, attended the church or why he might have attacked the pastor.

Former Forest Hill Mayor James Gosey said Kirk started the church in 1995 in a strip mall before building the red-brick church.

Kirk was also an unofficial volunteer chaplain who occasionally counseled members of a local high school football team, Fort Worth school district spokesman Clint Bond said.

Loftin, the associate minister, said that church members were grieving but would recover from the loss "with the help of God."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-10-30-Car%20Into%20Church-Deaths/id-6a3348013ba347559fbaaf6b8c5ad2fe

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After Sandy, canceled flights but no airport chaos

People wait to do check in at Madrid Barajas T4 international airport, in Madrid, Tuesday, Oct. 30, 2012. In the aftermath of superstorm Sandy, airports hundreds of thousands of travelers across the U.S. and around the world are stranded (AP Photo/Daniel Ochoa de Olza)

People wait to do check in at Madrid Barajas T4 international airport, in Madrid, Tuesday, Oct. 30, 2012. In the aftermath of superstorm Sandy, airports hundreds of thousands of travelers across the U.S. and around the world are stranded (AP Photo/Daniel Ochoa de Olza)

The empty Delta Air Lines check in area at the international airport in Barcelona, Spain, Tuesday, Oct. 30, 2012. In the aftermath of superstorm Sandy, airports hundreds of thousands of travelers across the U.S. and around the world are stranded. (AP Photo/Manu Fernandez)

Travelers on Delta Airlines look at a departure screen Monday, Oct. 29, 2012, in Detroit. Dozens of departing flights have been canceled at Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport as a looming superstorm locks down flights to the East Coast. Hurricane Sandy continued on its path Monday, as the storm forced the shutdown of mass transit, schools and financial markets, sending coastal residents fleeing, and threatening a dangerous mix of high winds and soaking rain.?(AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

(AP) ? Hurricane Sandy has left more than 16,000 flight cancellations in its wake.

Chaos at airports? Hardly.

Not long ago, a powerful storm pounding the Northeast would have brought havoc to some of the nation's busiest airports: families sleeping on the floor amidst mounds of luggage; passengers stuck for hours on planes hoping to take off; and dinners cobbled together from near-empty vending machines.

In the aftermath of Sandy, airports from Washington to Boston are deserted. There are hundreds of thousands of travelers stranded across the U.S. and around the world, but instead of camping out inside airport terminals they are staying with friends and family or in hotels.

After years of storm mismanagement and the bad public relations that followed, U.S. airlines have rewritten their severe weather playbooks. They've learned that it's best to cancel flights early and keep the public away from airports, even if that means they'll have a bigger backlog to deal with once conditions improve.

This allows the airlines to tell gate agents, baggage handlers and flight crews to stay home, too ? keeping them fresh once they're needed again.

And by moving planes to airports outside of the storm's path, airlines can protect their equipment and thereby get flight schedules back to normal quickly after a storm passes and airports reopen.

These precautions make good business sense. They also help the airlines comply with new government regulations that impose steep fines for leaving passengers stuck on planes for three hours or more.

"The last few major storms created such gridlock, and such bad will with their best customers, they just had to shift their behavior," said Kate Hanni, who heads up the passenger advocacy group Flyers Rights and lobbied for the three-hour rule. "The flying public would rather have their flights pre-cancelled than be sleeping in Chicago on a cot."

Departure monitors at airports across the Northeast Monday and Tuesday reflected that new approach.

London: Canceled.

Seattle: Canceled.

Los Angeles: Canceled.

Hong Kong: Canceled.

Houston: Canceled.

And the number of cancellations is likely to rise.

"It will probably take until the weekend for things to return to normal," said Rob Maruster, the chief operating officer of JetBlue Airways, which is based in New York.

Even "normal" won't be perfect. Passengers are reporting multi-hour wait times at most airline call centers and they are likely to experience long lines once airports reopen.

JetBlue is keenly aware of what is at stake when a big storm hits. On Valentine's Day weekend 2007, a massive snowstorm hammered the East Coast. JetBlue was late to cancel flights. Passengers were stranded on planes for hours. When the storm finally cleared, other airlines resumed flights but JetBlue's operations were still in shambles.

Other airlines took note. Severe weather manuals were updated. Reservation systems were programmed to automatically rebook passengers when flights are canceled. And travelers now receive notifications by email, phone or text message.

"In past years, airlines would have soldiered on, trying to get their planes in the air no matter what," said George Hobica, founder of AirfareWatchdog.com. But they've learned that "there's no value in news cameras showing footage of people sleeping on cots in airports."

Enter Sandy.

Airlines spent days before the storm hit running though color-coded checklists to shut down their Northeast operations. Computers were covered in plastic tarps. Hotel rooms near airports were booked for gate agents and ramp workers. Planes, pilots and flight attendants were moved to other airports.

And ? don't worry ? shelter was found for animals traveling as cargo.

"Anything that could move by the wind, we've locked down," said Henry Kuykendall, who oversees operations for Delta Air Lines at New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport.

The airlines' in-house meteorologists started tracking this storm more than a week ago as it approached the Caribbean. By Thursday night, it was pretty clear that widespread cancelations would happen in Washington, Philadelphia, New York and Boston.

The next day, airlines started to waive fees for passengers who wanted to move to earlier or later flights. American Airlines, for instance, let travelers heading to any of 22 airports ? from Greensboro, N.C. in the south to Buffalo, N.Y. in the north ? change plans. Then teams started to cancel flights heading into or out of airports stretching from Washington to Boston.

That sounds easier than it is. Every plane in its fleet is in near constant motion. In one day, a single plane might fly from Atlanta to New York to Detroit ? and then back to Atlanta and then once more to New York.

If the airline doesn't want that plane to spend the night in New York, it has ripple effects throughout the system. For instance, that plane might have been scheduled the next day to fly passengers to Seattle and then on to San Francisco.

When Sandy hit, almost no planes were left in the Northeast.

JetBlue scattered the majority of its planes to 20 different airports across the country, even though 80 percent of its flights start or end in New York or Boston.

American Airlines moved 80 planes that were supposed to spend Sunday night in the Northeast to other airports.

One Boeing 737 didn't make it out of Boston in time because of a mechanical issue. Left with no other solution, American filled the plane with fuel to make it as heavy as possible, faced it toward the wind, locked the wheels and moved it away from anything else.

"We'll keep our fingers crossed," said Jon Snook, the airline's vice president of operations planning and performance.

Delta got all of its planes out of New York. The last plane took off at 1:01 a.m. Monday ? a Boeing 757 with 157 people on board heading to Georgetown, Guyana. US Airways held all but one of its Transatlantic planes bound for Philadelphia at European airports. And United Airlines removed all but about a dozen planes from its Washington Dulles and Newark, N.J., hubs.

Once the clouds clear, flights won't start up immediately.

JetBlue's Maruster equated starting up the airline again to be like putting together a 1,000-piece jigsaw puzzle. It's not about staffing levels, but an overall game plan that makes sense. "At a certain point, putting more hands on the table doesn't help get it solved faster," he said.

The airlines need to ask a lot of questions before bringing in planes.

First, are the runways open? New York's JFK and LaGuardia airports both had water flow onto the runways.

Next, is there public transit to get workers to the airport? If not, does the airline have enough staff staying at nearby hotels that can be bused in?

Finally, the airline has to check on all the other people needed to run an airport: the Transportation Security Administration, customs officials, caters, fuel trucks and even the people who push wheelchairs through the terminal.

"Before we can even move an airplane here, we need to make sure those resources are here," said Delta's Kuykendall. "There's a lot of moving pieces that people don't see. It's a dance to get it all to work."

___

Scott Mayerowitz can be reached at http://twitter.com/GlobeTrotScott.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-10-30-Superstorm-Airlines-Behind%20Scenes/id-5eeb122afe114eb08eac2257e6f51530

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Adam Levine House: Maroon 5 Rock Star Buys In Beverly Hills, Calif. (PHOTOS)

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/10/29/adam-levine-house-maroon-_n_2042425.html

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Egypt church moves closer to picking new pope

CAIRO (Reuters) - A vote to help choose a pope for Egypt's Coptic Orthodox church began on Monday in a process the minority Christians hope will deliver a leader to guide them safely through the upheaval of the Arab Spring.

The previous incumbent, Pope Shenouda III, had led the church for four decades until his death in March at the age of 88. His successor will assume the post in a fast-changing Egypt where long oppressed Islamists are now in power - a major shift that is a source of alarm for the minority Christian community.

About 2,400 people have the right to vote in Monday's ballot and must pick from a shortlist announced by the church on October 13 and which comprises two bishops and three monks aged between 49 and 70.

Picked by the church, the voters include leading members of the church, public figures and a handful of representatives of the Ethiopian Church, which has historic links to the church in Egypt.

The three most popular candidates go forward to the November 4 draw which, according to an ancient tradition, will be carried out by a child who must be blindfolded. The new pope will be the 118th to lead the Coptic Church.

"We are all so worried from the situation in Egypt now and the rise of Islamists to power but the church has always been harassed," said Magdy Helmi, a 53-year old voting as a representative of a provincial branch of the Coptic Church. "The church became an expert in surviving bad times," he added.

The Muslim Brotherhood, the mainstream Islamist movement that propelled President Mohamed Mursi to power, has sworn to guard the rights of Christians in the overwhelmingly majority Sunni Muslim country of 83 million people.

Monday's voting took place at a cathedral complex in Cairo's Abbasiya district. Bearded priests in black robes queued up to post their ballot papers into transparent boxes. The result was expected late on Monday.

"I hope that whoever wins will have the patience and wisdom of Pope Shenouda as times are tough on both Christians and Muslims - on all Egyptians," said Sameh Nazeh, a 39-year old Copt who was waiting for his wife - one of the voters - to cast her ballot.

(Writing by Tom Perry, Editing by William Maclean)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/egypt-church-moves-closer-picking-pope-131511935.html

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Man in Afghan uniform kills 2 British troops

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) ? A man wearing an Afghan police uniform shot and killed two British soldiers at a checkpoint in southern Afghanistan on Tuesday, international military officials said.

The assault appeared to the be the latest in a string of insider attacks that have threatened the partnership between international troops and the Afghan forces they are trying to train to take over responsibility for the country's security.

A statement from the NATO military coalition said only that the assailant was wearing a police uniform, leaving open the possibility that the attacker was a militant posing as a policeman. The statement did not provide details on the shooting, saying it was being investigated.

The British Ministry of Defense said the attack happened at a checkpoint in Helmand Province's Nahri Sarraj district.

"The loss of these soldiers is a huge blow," Maj. Laurence Roche, a spokesman for British troops in Helmand, said in a statement.

The two killed soldiers were with the 1st Battalion The Royal Gurkha Rifles, he said.

At least 53 international troops have been killed in attacks by Afghan soldiers or police this year, and a number of other assaults are still under investigation, the international alliance has said.

The surge in insider attacks is throwing doubt on the capability of the Afghan security forces to take over from international troops ahead of a planned handover to the Afghans in 2014. It has further undermined public support for the 11-year war in NATO countries.

The attacks have not been limited to members of the NATO-led international coalition. More than 50 Afghan members of the government's security forces also have died this in attacks by their own colleagues.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/man-afghan-uniform-kills-2-british-troops-161309805.html

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Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Turkish police fire tear gas at banned secularist march

ANKARA (Reuters) - Turkish police fired tear gas and water cannon to disperse thousands of secularists protesting at a banned rally in the capital on Monday against what they see as an increasingly authoritarian and Islamist government.

The scenes of chanting men and women draped in Turkish flags and carrying banners portraying the country's founding father Mustafa Kemal Ataturk highlight a longstanding division in Turkish society between staunch secularists on the one hand and more conservative religious Turks on the other.

Although Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan won a third term in power last year with 50 percent of the vote, many secular Turks fear his socially conservative AK Party has Islamist tendencies that threaten the secular republic founded by Ataturk.

"They are trying to turn us into another Iran or some kind of neo-Ottoman Empire. We are against this," said retired 64-year-old Erdem Sevinc.

"We are here today to send a message to those who are trying to destroy the principles of this republic," he said.

The local government in Ankara, also controlled by Erdogan's AK Party, banned the rally citing "intelligence" it would be used for "provocation", a move protesters said was designed to silence government opponents.

"Why have they banned this march? Because they are scared. They are scared of course," said 68-year-old Metin Alkan, sporting a black tie emblazoned with Ataturk's face.

"Look at us, do we look like a danger?" he said, laughing.

Waving Turkish flags several thousand people gathered outside the old parliament building in the city center to try to march to Ataturk's mausoleum to mark the 89th anniversary of the founding of the Turkish Republic in 1923.

"Resign government! Damn you Tayyip!" the crowd chanted, referring to the prime minister.

"The day will come when the AK Party will give account to the people," they shouted.

"We are Mustafa Kemal's soldiers! Turkey is secular and will remain secular!" others shouted.

But the marchers were kept back by a barricade of riot police who began firing tear gas and water cannon into the crowd, which included children and elderly men and women, as some people tried to storm the police blockade.

TEAR GAS, WATER CANNON

Some in the crowd threw projectiles at the line of police, prompting them to fire more tear gas and water cannon. People pushed and shoved to get out of the line of fire while others were doubled up on the ground, coughing from the gas.

Several young girls were carried out of the crowd unconscious, drenched by the water cannon.

"Why are they doing this? This is really bad. We are citizens of this country, we are not enemies," said 21-year-old computer studies student Melisa Cilli.

"They want another kind of system here, a dictatorship, with Erdogan as the dictator," she said.

Several hours later police removed the barricades allowing the crowds to march to the mausoleum some three kilometers away.

Erdogan was first elected a decade ago with an overwhelming majority and has presided over a period of unprecedented prosperity, winning him admirers among Western nations keen to portray Turkey as a democratic example in a troubled region.

But that success story has been undermined by growing criticism of the authoritarian style of his rule.

Hundreds of politicians, academics and journalists are in jail on charges of plotting against the government, while more than 300 army officers were convicted last month of conspiring against Erdogan almost a decade ago, and handed long jail terms.

Media watchdog the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) said this month that Turkey had jailed more reporters than Iran, China or Eritrea.

Secular Turks also point to increasing restrictions on alcohol and changes to the education system introduced by the AK Party as a sign the country is becoming more Islamic.

Erdogan has also forged close ties with Islamist governments in Egypt, Tunisia and elsewhere in the Arab world.

Kemal Kilicdaroglu, leader of the main opposition Republican People's Party (CHP) set up by Ataturk in 1924, joined the march and later criticized the police's handling of the event.

"Those people only had Turkish flags in their hands. The state had police, tear gas, water cannon and tanks. Hey, where are you going? Are you going to war? You don't need permission to celebrate the republic," he said.

(Writing by Jonathon Burch; Editing by Jon Hemming)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/turkish-police-fire-tear-gas-banned-secularist-march-160618677.html

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PowerPoint Killer Prezi Launches New Interface

preziPrezi, a popular alternative to Microsoft PowerPoint and other presentation applications, launched a new version of its interface today. The company, which is advised by Jack Dorsey, also announced that it has passed the 15 million user milestone.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/KtuxJEA3CyE/

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Tricep Pushdowns :?60 Seconds on Muscle? Fouad Abiad ...



Find out about the latest muscle building, body building, fat burning, thermogenics and fitness supplements ? Fouad Abiad explains his tips and techniques on tricep pushdowns.

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Source: http://stek.org/videos/tricep-pushdowns-60-seconds-on-muscle-fouad-abiad/

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Amtrak cancels Tuesday service in Northeast

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Amtrak says it has canceled all Tuesday service in the Northeast due to high winds and heavy rain from Hurricane Sandy.

The railroad said passenger service between Boston and Raleigh, N.C., and between the East Coast and Chicago, New Orleans and Florida will be suspended for the second day in a row.

Cancellations include Acela Express, Northeast Regional, Keystone and Shuttle service, among other trains. Passengers were urged to follow developments on Amtrak.com and Facebook and Twitter sites. No decision has yet been made on when service will be resumed.

Amtrak said passengers who have paid but who didn't travel because of the service disruption can receive a refund or a voucher for future travel.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-10-29-Superstorm-Amtrak/id-e45ce02714d04801a66002888b581027

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Candidates in Mass. US Senate race postpone campaigning as state rides out powerful hurricane (Star Tribune)

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monday melbourne roundup | blog | easy as (vegan) pie - australian ...

And so it was with a fizzle Melbourne International Arts Festival wrapped up for me this year. I *always* do this - over commit then end up not going to something or many things. Thankfully it was only one thing (Before Your Very Eyes) but I still suffer from FOMOD over it.

I finally got to clean the house properly for the first time in the month I've been back. Sometimes I feel like it's never going to end - but it has and it did and I sat on the couch on Saturday afternoon and thought that's it, I ain't moving.

Which always confirms up my fear that as soon as I stop, take stock I will slow down - if i don't maintain inertia I will stagnate.? B12 injections help, as does taking the proper amount of time for sleep (which I never do) and eating well.

How to maintain well oiled, balanced inertia? Something I've struggle with for the (almost) 9 years I've been living here. The answer is there isn't on a micro week level but there can (potentially) be at a macro year level.

I know March and October are the most insane months of the year for me (with January and August merely ridiculous) - I need to start planning my energy at that level, clear my diary months in advance. I get better at it every year. Lets see what 2013 has for me. For now I sleep/rest until January (though will be going to Sydney twice before then). Finishing school mid year will also help MUCHO.

out.

the last of the haussmans - national theatre live

Flawlessly performed, great set design, whip smart dialogue but deflated quite substantially in the second half. Not quite fully baked and didn't really have the cojones to face head on what he was alluding/building to in the first half. I feel ya buddy but you can't tap out halfway through an exorcism. 3/5

we're gonna die - melbourne international arts festival

More cabaret than theatre, Young Jean Lee says she creates work on the last thing in the world she would like to discuss. Cue an intensely personal and raw performance surrounding some of the most painful moments of her life and the pieces of advice that helped her get through.

The Fairfax was the WORST venue for this performance - it should have been at the Arts Festival Hub. I feel like that really let the show down. Nevertheless Young Jean Lee is an enigmatic and captivating performer - the songs created by her backing band Future Wife are intensely sweet and completely appropriate for the material.

I found this really special. 4/5

You can watch the beginning of We're Gonna Die on Vimeo.

an enemy of the people - melbourne international arts festival

I don't really know what to say about this. I found it INTENSELY egomanical but also very thought provoking and entertaining.

The text was handled insensitively I think but the production surrounding it was very very compelling. It sits so far outside theatre I usually see I've found myself pondering it for days. There was also a dog! I've never seen an animal performer onstage before!

This production left my head all mushy - there was so much going on, a lot in the name of naturalism that was at times frustrating but then also lulling. So yeah hrm. Bummed I didn't go to Hedda Gabler last year.. I had a ticket and everything! 3/5

Source: http://www.easyasveganpie.net/2012/10/monday-melbourne-roundup_29.html

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Dear Samsung Galaxy Note II, It's Not You, It's Me - Lauren Goode ...

When Samsung first introduced a sandwich-sized smartphone called the Galaxy Note in February, it was received with skepticism from people who prefer thinner, smaller phones.

Now, with 10 million Galaxy Notes sold worldwide, Samsung has taken the next step with the Samsung Galaxy Note II. This 4G LTE-compatible smartphone has an even larger screen than the first Note, but also has a slimmer, narrower body and a brand-new Android operating system.

It?s still too big for a smartphone.

I say this while acknowledging that it?s a well-made device, and that other consumers may be more comfortable with a large phone. I admittedly was sucked in by the brilliant, 5.5-inch display for shopping online, checking emails and reading articles.

I enjoyed using Samsung?s redesigned ?S Pen? stylus for writing what Samsung calls ?S Notes? and clipping Web images. The Note II also has a new feature called Air View, which shows an enlarged view of an email, photo or video when you hover the tip of the stylus just over the content you?re trying to see.

And the battery, which offers 24 percent more juice than the first Note, lasted me a full day and into the next morning, which is more than I can say for my iPhone.

But, after testing it over the past week and a half, the awkwardness that came with carrying such a large, ?notice me? phone outweighed the benefits of it, for me.

The Note II officially launched in the U.S. last week, and is available through all four major U.S. carriers ? AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile and Verizon Wireless ? plus U.S. Cellular. Almost all of the carriers are charging $300 for the device with a two-year contract. T-Mobile is doing something a little different: It?s selling the Note II for $250 with 20 consecutive months of $20 payments, or for $370 after a $50 mail-in rebate, also with a two-year agreement.

The Note II runs on a speedy quad-core processor. It has two gigabytes of internal RAM, and comes with 16GB of built-in storage, plus a microSD card slot for up to 64GB of additional storage.

The phone builds upon the features that were already in the first Note, and borrows some features from Samsung?s Galaxy S III smartphone. The cameras, for example, are the same eight-megapixel rear camera and 1.9-megapixel front camera as the Galaxy S III, but on the Note II, there are some advanced photo settings and more ways to view and organize your photos.

The Note II, which comes in white and titanium gray, measures about six inches by three inches, and is .37-inch thick. It weighs just over six ounces. Its rounded edges add to its overall sleek look.

Samsung has opted to use a combination of physical and touch-friendly buttons on the bottom of the Note II, which I liked, for the most part, though it?s hard not to accidentally hit the ?back? button when dislodging the stylus.

The large HD display shows pictures, videos and Web sites with amazing color, detail and clarity. At times I got so caught up looking at Facebook photos, or scrolling Twitter or ordering items through the Amazon app, that I stopped paying attention to what was going on around me, even when I was out in public.

The phone runs on the latest version of Google?s Android operating system, 4.1 Jelly Bean. This includes Google Now, a Siri-like personal-assistant function, and more colorful, comprehensive calendar notifications, which were so big on the Note II?s display that it would be impossible to miss a meeting reminder.

There are two home-screen modes users can choose from. Basic mode shows the conventional Android layout, littered with apps and widgets, which I think can be confusing for non-Android users. Easy mode shows a simplified home screen, with favorite apps and settings.

The browser includes a welcome ?pop-up? option. This allows you to click on a Web link, whether from an email or another app, and view the new Web page in a small, separate window that appears beside the app you?re in.

The Note II is technically a 4G LTE-compatible device, but whether you can access that 4G or LTE depends on the wireless carrier. I tested the Note II on T-Mobile?s and Sprint?s wireless networks. Unfortunately, I wasn?t able to get my hands on Note II phones that run on Verizon?s or AT&T?s LTE networks.

In the dozens of speed tests I conducted in midtown and downtown Manhattan, I got an average download speed of .8 megabits per second and an upload speed of .67 megabits per second on Sprint?s 3G network. T-Mobile?s high-speed HSPA+ network performed much better, with an average download speed of 5.6 megabits per second and an average upload speed of 1.2 megabits per second. (For a little context: The average Internet speed of U.S. households is 6.7 megabits per second, according to Akamai.)

Call quality on the phone was very good, even when I was wearing headphones. Speakerphone worked especially well. The biggest drawback with calling on this phone isn?t the sound; it?s the size.

The Note II felt uncomfortably large pressed against my ear and face, with my hand stretched just to grip it. And here?s the thing: It?s not just during calls that the phone feels like it?s meant for people the size of LeBron James, who is 6?8? (and part of Samsung?s marketing for the phone).

With the Note, Samsung has been trying to offer a hybrid device, a ?phablet? if you will, that lets you carry just one gadget instead of a phone and a tablet. But for me it just didn?t split the difference well.

When I was heading out for a night and slipping it into my jacket pocket or purse I wished it was smaller. When I was sitting in bed watching videos on it, I wanted a tablet or laptop after awhile.

When I listened to music on it at the gym ? something I do regularly with my iPhone ? the Note II started to feel like a responsibility instead of a running accessory.

Using the excellent Google Maps app on such a large screen was great. But one afternoon, while stopped at a street corner as I navigated downtown Manhattan, two people pointed at the phone. My friends gawked at it when I pulled the phone out of my bag after dinner one night.

Those who like the idea of a larger phone won?t be displeased with the Samsung Galaxy Note II, a fine specimen of a smartphone. For me, it felt like I was trying to jam fine art into a tiny apartment. It?s beautiful, but it just didn?t fit.

Source: http://allthingsd.com/20121029/dear-samsungs-galaxy-note-ii-its-not-you-its-me/

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The Destruction of Privacy and Limits of Freedom | Networks

With the reemergence of open-source and free-to-use browsers and websites like Firefox and Napster, companies have found it too difficult to limit the free exchange of information like movies, songs, and ideas, thus losing money. Also, just having an online presence requires money to pay bills and paychecks. For a while companies solved this by placing ads on websites that matched the content on the page, but this did not always garner the attention and payoffs they wanted. Then someone discovered that they could use an aspect of the web that was introduced in the browser Netscape when it first came out, ?Cookies?.

Little pieces of information, downloaded onto a user?s computer, that acted as a record of the user?s preferences and past activities on the web or certain websites. the companies then take that data stored in the cookies and correlate it to possible interests of the user. In this way, the cookies allow companies to tailor ads on a certain website to what they user may like, there-by increasing the chance that they will click on it and buy the good. The companies claim that this process makes the online experience more enjoyable since everything on a page is either informative, useful, or pleasant.

However, companies started looking for and finding new ways to gather more information about their audience. Two of these ways, ?Flash cookies? and ?beacons,? are very intrusive and scary with the amount of information, types of information, and ways of gathering information the employ. Flash cookies are used to re-install cookies that users have deleted and in conjunction with cookies, monitor in real time what the user is looking at online. Beacons monitor and record in real time what the user is doing on a certain web page, even where the mouse is. the types of data they record range from height and weight to area code and place of residence to detailed health status to average income. Companies that use these methods then sell the bundles of data about individual people in packages based on the data to consumer companies that place ads on web pages for the users based on the data.

Yeah, it is kinda nice for a web page to only show people stuff they are interested in rather than retirement options to teenagers and the latest funny T-shirt company to retirees. But at what cost to our personal freedom and privacy is this okay? With the rising use of these methods and not a single law passed on the subject thus far, even the most recent series of closed-door meetings organized by W3C, a proper governance of the Internet Global standards organization, is unable answer this question.

This is a scary time we are moving into. there needs to be control over these practices so we can keep one of the core principles this nation was founded on, freedom and privacy of the individual.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703940904575395073512989404.html
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/05/technology/privacy-advocates-and-advertisers-at-odds-over-web-tracking.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0
http://www.sba.gov/content/online-advertising-law
http://business.ftc.gov/documents/bus28-advertising-and-marketing-internet-rules-road
http://www.verio.com/resource-center/business-guides/internet-law/

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Source: http://blogs.cornell.edu/info2040/2012/10/29/the-destruction-of-privacy-and-limits-of-freedom/

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Video: Weather threat is changing presidential campaign plans (cbsnews)

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