Author: smartblogger2312

  • World leaders send wishes for the Chinese New Year

    Global leaders are wishing the best for those celebrating the Chinese New Year and the beginning of the Year of the Snake.

    Global leaders are wishing the best for those celebrating the Chinese New Year and the beginning of the Year of the Snake.

    Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper issued a statement Friday to extend his best wishes to those celebrating Chinese New Year in Canada and elsewhere in the world.

    “The many fireworks and parades marking this special occasion always remind me of how alive and well the vibrant Chinese culture is in our country,” Harper said. “It also reminds us of the enormous contributions by Chinese Canadians to build the great nation we have today.”

    Harper said that as Chinese Canadians usher in the New Year, “they can rest assured that our government is working to create the jobs and economic conditions that will help ensure that the Year of the Snake is one marked by good fortune and prosperity.”

    Separately, Sir Arthur Alexander Foulkes, governor-general of the Bahamas, wished a happy Chinese New Year to the Chinese people at a reception in the Chinese Embassy to the Bahamas on Saturday.

    “On behalf of the government and people of the Bahamas, I wish the Chinese people a very happy new year. We value very highly our friendship with China,” Foulkes said.


  • Landscape Art Photo

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    Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Proin condimentum diam ut felis elementum aliquam dapibus lacus consectetur. Cum sociis natoque penatibus et magnis dis parturient montes, nascetur ridiculus mus. Maecenas ante lorem, volutpat ac ultrices blandit, mollis quis lacus. Quisque vitae ipsum non libero molestie gravida a in orci. Vestibulum eros leo, posuere sed tempus vel, tincidunt vitae dui.

    In turpis lorem, hendrerit eget vehicula vitae, ullamcorper in erat. Cras ullamcorper ligula nec risus volutpat vulputate. Nunc a orci vehicula lacus porta vehicula. Nulla leo leo, pretium a ornare at, porttitor id nisl. Class aptent taciti sociosqu ad litora torquent per conubia nostra, per inceptos himenaeos. Curabitur tristique pretium fringilla. Etiam quis varius purus.

    Praesent semper feugiat sem, id porta diam euismod nec. Aliquam fringilla porta elementum. Donec consequat dignissim luctus. Morbi urna quam, pretium eget facilisis congue, tincidunt eget nulla. Aliquam rutrum nulla quis arcu auctor non elementum dolor ornare. Aliquam semper eros fermentum nulla elementum malesuada.

    Sed ut turpis quis neque fringilla vestibulum. Nunc vestibulum malesuada tellus sed volutpat.

    Sed feugiat sollicitudin purus, at rhoncus sapien iaculis vel. Nunc vitae nisi arcu, eu rutrum libero. Morbi fermentum auctor iaculis. Quisque eleifend nisi ac orci accumsan elementum. Integer urna orci, tempor in mollis id, sollicitudin vitae nibh. Vestibulum posuere laoreet nisi vel pellentesque. Ut a velit ac elit condimentum egestas a ut massa. Aenean sollicitudin mattis porta.

    Nulla dictum ornare justo, vel mattis quam euismod at. Phasellus leo sem, viverra eu sollicitudin sit amet, commodo eget dolor. Vestibulum a ante nec lorem volutpat vehicula. Pellentesque eu arcu metus, eu dignissim tellus.

    Duis nec porttitor turpis. Sed a quam quis risus congue luctus. Fusce hendrerit tempus semper. Maecenas et mi id nisi aliquam blandit. Fusce ut nisi orci. Praesent at nunc erat, ut cursus dolor. Suspendisse quam arcu, lobortis at pulvinar non, pellentesque at lorem. Vivamus condimentum malesuada justo non cursus. Donec auctor dui vitae eros mollis vel placerat nulla placerat.


  • Australia Probes Apple, Microsoft, Adobe Over High Prices

    Australian officials are looking into whether Apple, Microsoft, and Adobe charge too much for their products in the region.

    Australian officials are looking into whether Apple, Microsoft, and Adobe charge too much for their products in the region.

    The committee for infrastructure and communications within Australia’s House of Representatives will hold a hearing on Friday, March 22 to examine the issue. In a news release, the committee said it has issued summonses to the three tech firms to appear at that hearing.

    “The Committee has been examining claims made by organizations such as CHOICE, and the Australian Communications Consumer Action Network.”

    CHOICE, which describes itself as “the people’s watchdog,” said in a statement that it welcomed the committee’s probe. The group said the government’s investigation will focus on the price of computers, software, games, and digital music “to force international companies to front up and explain their higher prices in Australia.”
    CHOICE submitted a report to the committee last year, which found that Australians are paying on average 34 percent more for software, 52 percent more for iTunes music, 88 percent more for Wii games and 41 percent more for computer hardware than U.S. consumers.

    “We have recommended that the government investigate whether measures used to sustain international price discrimination, like geo-blocking, are anti-competitive,” CHOICE said.

    On the Apple Australia website, an iPad mini starts at approximately $379, whereas it is $329 in the U.S. The Microsoft Surface RT, meanwhile, starts at $575 in Australia and $499 in the U.S.

    PCMag has reached out to Microsoft, Adobe, and Apple, and will update with any statement they might have.
    This is not the first time Apple has tangled with Australian officials. In June 2012, Apple was fined about $2 million for misleading the public about the new iPad’s capabilities.


  • Apple Is Testing Watch-Like Device

    Apple reportedly is developing a “watch-like device”.

    Want the powers of communication at your wrist, like out of some sci-fi novel? Apple reportedly is developing a “watch-like device” according to the Wall Street Journal, and it may have some of the features of a smartphone.

    Sources say Apple has discussed this kind of a device with Hon Hai Precision Industry Co., also known as Foxconn, and that company is developing technology for Apple and other customers that could be “making displays more power-efficient” and helping chip manufacturers “strip down their products,” the Wall Street Journal reports.
    The report says Apple’s plans for the device are “unclear.”

    The New York Times speculates that the device could have many of the iPhone’s current features, such as Siri or maps, or maybe it could monitor health or make mobile payments.

    What do you think? What would you like to see out of a smartwatch?
    Read More at Wall Street Journal


  • 5% of Credit Reports Contain Costly Errors: FTC

    Five percent of U.S. consumers have an error on their credit report that “could lead to them paying more for products such as auto loans and insurance,” the Federal Trade Commission said Monday.

    Five percent of U.S. consumers have an error on their credit report that “could lead to them paying more for products such as auto loans and insurance,” the Federal Trade Commission said Monday, as it issued a long-awaited study of credit report accuracy.

    “These are eye-opening numbers for American consumers,” said Howard Shelanski, director of the FTC’s Bureau of Economics. “The results of this first-of-its-kind study make it clear that consumers should check their credit reports regularly. If they don’t, they are potentially putting their pocketbooks at risk.”

    The trade group for the nation’s credit reporting agencies issued a swift response challenging the agency’s interpretation, saying the study shows credit reports are “highly accurate.”

    “The study also showed that 95 percent of consumers are unaffected by errors in their credit report,” the Consumer Data Industry Association said in a statement.

    The FTC study, eight years in the making, also tracked consumers as they tried to fix or dispute errors in their credit reports. More than one in 10 who did this saw their credit score change as a result.

    The study was ordered by Congress in 2003, when it passed the Fair and Accurate Credit Transaction Act. The FTC followed 1,001 consumers as they tried to navigate the credit report system and to fix mistakes in their reports.

    Among other things, the study found:

    • 26 percent of consumers in the study identified a “potentially material error”;
    • 21 percent managed to obtain a modification of an error;
    • Roughly half of that group experienced a change in credit score;
    • Most of those credit score changes were minor, with roughly half resulting in swings of 20 points or less;
    • The most important finding of all: For 52 of individuals studied, “the resulting increase was such that their credit risk tier decreased,” meaning they were likely to get cheaper loan rates.

    Consumer groups responding to the study said it indicates a need for reform of the credit reporting industry.

    “It’s unconscionable that 40 million American have errors in their credit reports, and that 10 million have errors grave enough to cause them to be denied or charged more for credit or insurance or even be denied a job,” said Chi Chi Wu, staff attorney at the National Consumer Law Center.

    Studies of credit report errors have been conducted before, but they have produced confusing results. Many errors are not material — a misspelled street name for example. And errors are not the real problem — lower credit scores that cost consumers when they try to get loans are. Credit bureaus are required by law to quickly fix mistakes, but there have long been allegations that the dispute process is difficult and stacked against consumers. The FTC report attempts to address that, too.

    Of the 262 consumers in the study who disputed information they said was inaccurate:

    • 37 percent said all their concerns were addressed;
    • 42 percent said their report had been modified, but there were still errors on their report;
    • 21 percent said they were unsuccessful in getting their reports modified.

    The report did not attempt to establish the veracity of the consumers’ disputes.

    Credit expert John Ulzheimer, who helped develop the credit score and is now president of Consumer Education at SmartCredit.com, said he felt both the FTC and the credit industry trade group were “embellishing” their claims about the results of the study, but he, too, found the FTC data troubling.

    “I’d side with the FTC that the results are more disturbing than they are confirming credit files are accurate,” he said. He suggested taking the dispute results with “a grain of salt” because the errors claimed by consumers were not independently confirmed.

    FTC Chairman Jon Leibowitz told CBS News, which first reported the study’s findings on “60 Minutes,” that the results were “highly troubling. … It’s a pretty high error rate.”

    The credit industry began fighting back even before the “60 Minutes” segment aired. It issued a press release Sunday afternoon, and several employees of Experian spent the evening sending tweets to Twitter users who attacked the industry.

    “It’s easy to selectively hype snippets from the FTC study to sensationalize the issue,” Stuart Pratt, consumer data industry spokesman, said in the release. “But the number important to consumers is the one they ignored – that only 2.2 percent of credit reports contain material errors.”

    The industry and FTC numbers differ because they describe slightly different things: The FTC says 5 percent of consumers are impacted by a serious credit report error, while the industry derives its 2.2 percent figure from the fact that consumers have three different major credit reports, and often errors appear on only one or two of those.

    The industry also disagrees that errors are hard to fix.

    “The notion that it is difficult to dispute an error is just wrong. It is irresponsible to suggest to consumers that they might as well not take action when they have a question about their credit report,” Pratt said.

    Experian public relations officials repeatedly sent out this message last night: “If you ever spot an error on your credit report, please report here http://t.co/5nncPpfPAvg dispute time is 14 days.”

    It also sent users to the Experian website to read about the firm’s policies

    “Experian’s Commitment to Data Integrity, Customer Service and Consumer Education http://t.co/kejlxpQYvia @ExperianNews”

    Some Twitter users complained about Tweet campaign:

    “@Experian_US so (you are) responding (to) tweets from US but resolving life changing disputes from Chile and India!Priorities please!!!” wrote @elizabethforma.

    As the Red Tape Chronicles and other outlets have reported, consumers disputes are often sent overseas for consideration, and workers in places like India and Chile only have a few moments to consider each dispute.

    An Experian official who was sending out Tweets would not agree to be interviewed by NBC News; she directed questions to Pratt at the industry group.


  • Starz Holds On to Rights for Sony Movies

    Starz extended its agreement with Sony Corp.’s film business by five years.

    Starz STRZA +7.08% extended its agreement with Sony Corp.’s 6758.TO -10.14% film business by five years, giving the premium cable network exclusive pay-television rights to Sony Pictures Entertainment movie releases through 2021.

    Class A shares were up 8% at $18 in midday trading.

    The deal comes about two months after Starz was outbid by Netflix Inc. NFLX -1.76% for rights to Walt Disney Co. DIS +0.16% movies.

    The new agreement with Sony provides movie content for all Starz platforms including its Starz and Encore channels as well as through on-demand and online streaming services.

    Financial terms of the deal weren’t disclosed.

    Starz was spun off by Liberty Media Corp. LMCA +0.78% in January as Liberty aimed to free up cash to pursue its effort to take over Sirius XM Radio Inc. SIRI +0.96%

    The developments at Starz reflect broader shifts in the premium cable sector, long dominated by Time Warner Inc.’s TWX -1.09% HBO and CBS Corp.’s CBS -1.26% Showtime. While these channels originated as outlets for movies, the proliferation of movies on various outlets including on-demand services and cheap DVD rental services has reduced their value for premium movie channels.



  • Responding to news that Marco Rubio will give the GOP rebuttal to the president’s State of the Union address, a Univisión employee referred to the senator as a ‘loser.’

    (more…)


  • Microsoft Surface Pro model sells out

    Microsoft celebrated “amazing” response to its latest model of the Surface over the weekend,.

    Microsoft celebrated “amazing” response to its latest model of the Surface over the weekend, with the announcement that the tablet’s 128 GB model had sold out online and in stores across the country.

    We’re working with our retail partners who are currently out of stock of the 128GB Surface Pro to replenish supplies as quickly as possible

    -said Surface product chief Panos Panay in a company blog post Saturday.

    The larger model of the Surface sold out almost immediately online, and some stores reported that customers were lined up outside of Microsoft, Best Buy and Staples locations in lines reminiscent of Apple launches. But once customers got to many of those stores, particularly partner retailers, they found that Microsoft had only shipped a handful of the tablets to go on shelves.

    That led to plenty of chatter that Microsoft may have orchestrated a sellout by limiting the number of units it sent out into stores.

    ReadWrite’s Brian Proffitt wrote that this appearance of planned scarcity reminds him of the Apple iPad 2 launch, when the company gave very limited amounts of the tablets to non-Apple stores.

    Of course, Microsoft may have been working to keep itself out of a different supply pickle — putting too many Surface Pros onto shelves and having to suffer the embarrassment of seeing them languish there.

    Microsoft hasn’t released sales data apart from the news that its larger model had sold out, so it will be some time before we can puzzle out whether this was really a representation of roaring demand or a supply problem on Microsoft’s end.

    Reviews of the Surface Pro have been lukewarm, with many folks not quite sure what to make of the device.

    The Surface Pro is generally viewed as a tablet but is probably more fairly compared to laptops. As a tablet it’s a clunky device with bad battery life. As a laptop, it’s a lightweight machine that will run legacy Windows software and works with either of Microsoft’s two models of QWERTY keyboard.

    There haven’t been solid numbers on the device’s tablet sibling, the Surface RT, either, though analysts estimate that Microsoft has moved at least 700,000 units since its October debut.


  • When E-Mail Turns From Delight to Deluge

    IN the not-so-distant past, the chipper AOL sound of “You’ve got mail!” filled me with giddiness and glee.

    IN the not-so-distant past, the chipper AOL sound of “You’ve got mail!” filled me with giddiness and glee. I would eagerly check my in-box, excited to see what message had arrived.

    Those days are long gone. Now, when I examine my various e-mail accounts, my main emotion is dread.

    One morning last week, I sat at my desk and stared at my Gmail in-box; 40,000 unread e-mails stared back. (That big number is a function of my life as a writer, and of having five different accounts, work and personal.) Feeling unusually invigorated, I attacked the mountain, trashing subscription newsletters and social networking alerts en masse. I typed brief confirmations for various meetings, sent long-overdue R.S.V.P.’s and replied to a few friends who had sent warm notes of hello. In an hour, I worked my way through roughly 100 e-mails.

    Satisfied by a morning well spent, I left for an early lunch. But when I returned to my desk an hour later, it was as if I’d never deleted a thing. There were dozens of new messages, each waiting to be tackled.

    Frustrated, I closed my e-mail and couldn’t bring myself to return to it for the rest of the day.

    It wasn’t always like this. E-mail was once a great tool for communication, one that was less intrusive than the telephone and faster than the Postal Service. Now, even when it works as designed, it’s a virtual nightmare — and, occasionally, an actual one. I’ve had many a stress dream about missing important notes from my boss.

    Where have we gone wrong?

    Part of it has to do with how stagnant the format of e-mail has remained, while the rest of communication and social networking has surged light years ahead, says Susan Etlinger, an analyst at the Altimeter Group, who studies how people use and interact with technology and the Internet. E-mail is largely arranged along a linear timeline, with little thought given to context and topic.

    “It’s become another timeline or feed,” she says. “It goes by and then it’s done. The current model of e-mail feels obsolete.”

    She also says that while most e-mail providers are trying to block spammers and phishers from bombarding people, they have barely begun to tackle the problem of social spam — a plague of unnecessary and unwanted e-mail that includes alerts from social networks like LinkedIn, Twitter and Tumblr.

    “The spam problem has mostly been fixed, at least, in terms of what is legitimately supposed to be spam,” she said. “It’s the unwanted e-mails that are so horrifying.”

    These frustrations seem universal. And they are not going away anytime soon, particularly given the news that the post office is planning to drop the delivery of certain mail on Saturdays. Our dependence on e-mail is only growing. Indeed, Pingdom, a Web site that monitors Internet use, published a report in January saying that there are 2.2 billion e-mail users worldwide, and that global e-mail traffic has reached 144 billion messages a day.

    Some preliminary answers to this digital quandary are emerging.

    Google offered its version of a solution with Priority in-box, a feature that tries to automatically identify urgent messages. And Apple recently introduced a “V.I.P.” tag that will push a notification to the user when an e-mail arrives from a previously designated important person. These help, but they are not enough on their own.

    Even using both systems, I still resort to keeping an eye on my in-box through the day and jotting down a list — on paper — of people to write back at the end of the day or before bed. It’s archaic at best, and I rarely get to everyone before the day is out.

    Of course, there is a regimented, minimalist approach to clearing out in-boxes each day — otherwise known as In-Box Zero — but that requires a level of constant attention and maintenance beyond the scope of my time and patience.

    I was starting to consider e-mail bankruptcy — ditching my account and signing up for a new one — until I heard about a new option in the e-mail wars, an iOS app called Mailbox, which promises to change how we manage our mail.

    Mailbox, in a way, harks back to an older, simpler system in which you checked your mail — the paper kind — and sorted it as soon as you received it. You read the most pressing letters first, tossed away the junk and set aside pieces of mail that could be dealt with later. The app does much the same thing, by letting users sort their in-box into three neat columns, in a much sleeker and prettier interface than the basic mail clients available for the iPhone or most Android phones.


  • The Art of Flight

    The Art of Flight is a Red Bull sponsored documentary film about snowboarding. It was released on September 8, 2011 in the United States.

    The Art of FLIGHT follows Travis Rice, John Jackson, Mark Landvik, Scotty Lago, Jake Blauvelt, Nicolas Muller, Gigi Ruf, DCP and Pat Moore as they dream up new global adventures and progress the sport to unimaginable levels. Brain Farm has gathered an arsenal of the most advanced and progressive fi lm making technology to bring the masses a snowboarding adventure of epic proportions. Filmed on location in Jackson Hole, Alaska, Chile, Aspen, Patagonia, British Columbia and more, FLIGHT brings the viewer along for the perfect blend of adventure/travel drama and high-energy snowboarding action.

    The Art of Flight is a Red Bull sponsored documentary film about snowboarding. It was released on September 8, 2011 in the United States.