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Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Egyptian Forces Storm Pro-Morsi Sit-Ins

Posted on 6:29 AM by Unknown

CAIRO — Security forces moved on Wednesday to clear two camps in Cairo
occupied by supporters of the ousted president, Mohamed Morsi,
deploying armored vehicles, bulldozers, tear gas, snipers and
helicopters in a sustained and bloody operation that seemed to
surprise some protesters with its resolve and to deepen an already
profound gulf in Egyptian society.
Witnesses spoke of gunfire from shotguns and automatic rifles as white
clouds of tear gas offset plumes of black smoke from burning tires.
Protesters arrived at field hospitals with gunshot wounds to the neck
and chest. At one location, soldiers were seen firing on a lone
protester lobbing rocks from a rooftop. There were reports of dozens
of fatalities, including three police officers. Scores of people were
arrested, including leaders of the Muslim Brotherhood, news reports
said.

The operation also threatened to reinforce regional tensions with
Turkey, whose Islamist-backed government opposed the overthrow of Mr.
Morsi. The "armed intervention on civilians, on people demonstrating"
was "completely unacceptable," in the words of President Abdullah Gul.

Hours after the operation began, the authorities said they had cleared
the smaller of two encampments at Nahda Square near Cairo University.
But protesters at the larger camp around the Rabaa al-Adawiya mosque
in the northeastern suburb of Nasr City remained defiant but seemed to
be under siege by vastly superior forces seeking to uproot them.

Pro-Morsi demonstrators from outside the larger camp, meanwhile,
clashed with the police on its approaches, braving waves of tear gas
to barricade streets. Some protesters prepared gasoline bombs and
broke paving stones to hurl at their adversaries as the confrontation
unfolded.

The clashes illuminated the deepening fissures in Egypt between an
Islamist movement sustained by the Muslim Brotherhood in support of
Mr. Morsi and secular forces who cast the military as protectors.

News agencies reported clashes between civilian supporters and foes of
Mr. Morsi in other parts of Cairo. An Egyptian human rights group, the
Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights, said the crackdown had
spurred counterattacks by Muslim Brotherhood supporters against Coptic
Christian churches in Minya and Sohag, south of Cairo, apparently
reflecting a perception among Islamists that the Coptic minority had
supported the military's action in ousting Mr. Morsi in early July.

As demonstrations spread to other cities on Wednesday, television
footage from the Mediterranean city of Alexandria and Aswan in the
south showed thousands of Morsi supporters taking to the streets to
protest the military action in Cairo. The authorities were reported to
have suspended rail services in and out of Cairo to prevent pro-Morsi
demonstrators from regrouping or summoning reinforcements.

Amid the confusion, there were wildly divergent tallies of the death
toll. The Muslim Brotherhood called the operation a "massacre" and put
the number of dead in the hundreds, a figure that was not immediately
borne out by reporters visiting morgues.

Egypt's state news agency reported that three members of the security
forces had been shot and killed. The Egyptian Health Ministry said
nine protesters had died. But, at one makeshift morgue run by
pro-Morsi protesters, the number of dead bodies rose from 3 to 12 in a
matter of minutes while at another, Agence France-Press reported, one
of its reporters counted 43 bodies.

The coordinated action against the Morsi supporters, which had been
expected for days, began around 7 a.m. local time. The protesters are
seeking the reinstatement of Mr. Morsi, who became Egypt's first
democratically elected president in 2012 and was deposed by the
military six weeks ago. In removing Mr. Morsi, the military also
suspended the Constitution and installed an interim government
presided over by a senior jurist.

A statement from the interim government praised the security forces
for showing what it called self-restraint and blaming leaders of the
Muslim Brotherhood for inciting violence. "The government holds these
leaders fully responsible for any spilled blood, and for all the
rioting and violence going on," the statement said, according to
Reuters.

The interim authorities also pledged to pursue a military-based
political blueprint for the country's future in "a way that strives
not to exclude any party from participation."
But, in a further sign of the rift between faith and political power,
Al Azhar, the pre-eminent Muslim religious authority, said it had no
advance knowledge that the authorities would use aggressive means to
disperse the protesters. A statement cited by Agence France-Presse
called on all sides to "exercise self-restraint and take into account
the interests of the nation" and said the "use of violence has never
been an alternative to a political solution."
The statement followed hours of clashes after army bulldozers moved in
to dismantle the defenses set up by protesters.

Images on Al Jazeera television showed a car ablaze and protesters
being treated for bloody injuries. Protesters' tents appeared to have
been razed, and a pillar of black smoke rose above palm trees in one
of the areas. The footage showed what appeared to be a gunman firing
from a rooftop, but the shooter's identity was not immediately clear.

At Nahda Square, black-uniformed police wearing gas masks and helmets
dragged and carried away protesters, the footage showed. At least one
of the protesters showed no sign of life as his limp body was loaded
into an ambulance. The police seemed to be rounding up protesters in
groups as they fled the barrages of tear gas. The footage also showed
smoke from burning tires.

State television broadcast images of what it said was a protester
firing on security forces with an assault rifle.

An Associated Press television video journalist at the larger of the
camps at Nasr City said he heard women screaming as a cloud of white
smoke hung over the site in eastern Cairo.

Mohamed Soltan, a representative of protesters there, told Al Jazeera
that a cameraman working with the protesters had been shot and killed
by a sniper while filming on a stage. There was no official
confirmation of the shooting.

According to a recent visitor, the camp in Nasr City was always likely
to present the authorities with a greater challenge. Tens of thousands
of people have built a well-equipped community there with electricity,
Internet access, a hospital, communal kitchens, latrines and showers.

While dozens of people have been killed by the police and the military
since the sit-ins began, analysts said, the crackdowns on the
protesters seemed to have reinforced their conviction to stay.

Mr. Morsi is being held at an undisclosed location. The military
authorities have taken steps toward his criminal prosecution on
charges relating to his activities during the revolution that ousted
his predecessor, Hosni Mubarak.

While Egyptians broadly consider Mr. Mubarak's autocracy to have been
fundamentally illegitimate, Mr. Morsi is now under investigation for
his own escape from political imprisonment and his work in the
Islamist political opposition that helped to topple Mr. Mubarak in
2011.
Copyright http://www.nytimes.com/
For Medical Devices Visit Here http://kacmedical.blogspot.com/
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Report: 2 dead in UPS plane crash near Alabama airport

Posted on 6:16 AM by Unknown

The pilot and co-pilot of a UPS plane were killed when their plane
crashed while approaching an airport in Birmingham, Ala., early
Wednesday, local media are reporting, citing Mayor William Bell.

The cargo plane, an A300 aircraft was en route from Louisville, Ky.,
when it crashed near a field, FAA spokeswoman Kathleen Bergen said in
an email.

The pilot and co-pilot were the only people aboard the plane, company
spokesman Jeff Wafford said. The crash happened at about 6 a.m.,
Bergen said.

Bell told al.com that no one on the ground was injured, which is
fortunate he said, because there is a church and some homes about 500
yards from the debris field.

"It's a tragedy anytime you have loss of life,'' the mayor told the
website. "I am grateful for the men and women of the police and fire
departments who quickly got the scene under control."

Bell, who was briefed on the situation by the city's fire chief, said
the plane broke into two or three primary pieces. "There were two to
three small explosions, but we think that was related to the aviation
fuel," he said.

Flight tracking site flightaware.com shows the cargo plane, identified
by the site and the FAA as flight UPS1354, dropped more than 9,000
feet over the course of two minutes about four minutes before the
crash.

"As we work through this difficult situation, we ask for your
patience, and that you keep those involved in your thoughts and
prayers," Atlanta-based UPS said in a statement.

Birmingham Airport Authority spokeswoman Toni Herrera-Bast said the
plane crashed in "open land" she described as a grassy field on the
outskirts of Birmingham-Shuttlesworth International Airport. She said
the crash hasn't affected airport operations.
Copyright http://www.usatoday.com/
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Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Rihanna victorious in Topshop T-shirt court battle.

Posted on 9:06 PM by Unknown

RIHANNA has won a High Court battle today against Topshop after they
used her image on T-shirts without permission.
The Russian Roulette singer accused the fashion chain of failing to
seek approval from her before going ahead with printing their stock.
At a hearing in London, Judge Mr Justice Birss ruled in the
25-year-old's favour, asserting that the British retailer was guilty
of "passing off".
Passing off is a common law tort which can be used to enforce
unregistered trademark rights.
The chart-topper had claimed that the "unendorsed" T-shirts could have
damaged her image if fans believed it was genuine merchandise.
However, the judge stressed the "mere sale" of a T-shirt bearing a
celebrity image did not necessarily equate to an act of passing off.
It was instead due to the fact that a "substantial number" of buyers
were likely to have been deceived into purchasing the product on
"false belief" that it had been authorised by the singer.
As a result, he said this was damaging to Rihanna's "goodwill" and
represented a loss of control over her reputation in the "fashion
sphere".
Topshop disputed the claim.
However, despite accusations from Rihanna, the retailer's lawyer
insisted her entourage had contacted Topshop up to 10 times to request
clothing for the starlet since the lawsuit was filed.


© CopyRight - http://www.dailystar.co.uk/
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Egad! Could Samsung be CHEATING in Galaxy benchmark tests

Posted on 10:39 AM by Unknown
Samsung has reportedly been cheating in benchmark tests, artificially
boosting the scores of its latest and greatest system-on-chip, the
Exynos 5 Octa, on those performance-ranking number generators so
beloved by reviewers and product evaluators.

"Oh hell Samsung, shame on you!" wrote a Beyond3D forum member in a
posting on one of that site's forums last month.

The poster, a Luxembourger who goes by the handle Nebuchadnezzar, had
been testing a Samsung Exynos 5 Octa when he discovered that although
he thought he was running the chip's GPU at 532MHz, it only hit that
clock speed on two benchmarks he used for testing: AnTuTu and
GLBenchmark. For all other apps, it ran at 480MHz – a much better
speed for battery-life testing.

The Exynos 5 Octa, by the way, is so named because it has four
high-performance ARM Cortex-A15 cores and four low-power ARM Cortex-A7
cores, all baked into a single 28-nanometer die. It comes in two
versions: the 5410, which contains an Imagination Technologies PowerVR
SGX544MP3 GPU, and the 5420, which uses an ARM Mali-T628 MP6 GPU.
Nebuchadnezzar was testing a 5410.

Anand Lal Shimpi and Brian Klug over at the ever-interesting deep-tech
site AnandTech were tipped to Nebuchadnezzar's discovery, and since
they are both proud owners of the international version of the Samsung
Galaxy S 4 powered by an Exynos 5410, they decided to see if they
could replicate his findings.

They could – and with a few additions and clarifications. For example,
the GLBenchmark v.2.5.1 did indeed run at 532MHz, but its latest
v.2.7.0 incarnation – GLBenchmark having been subsumed into GFXBench
along with DXBenchmark – was throttled to 480MHz.

Samsung hasn't published megahertzage for its GPU, but Shimpi and Klug
said that their sources tell them it runs at 480MHz – which in fact is
what they discovered its clock rate to be when running any games,
"even the most demanding titles." But when running GLBenchmark 2.5.1,
AnTuTu, or Quadrant – benchmarks that reviewers and product testers
might naturally use to rate a products – they ran at 532MHz.

Although Nebuchadnezzar had only reported on GPU behavior, Shimpi and
Klug checked out what the CPU was doing when running GLBenchmark
v.2.5.1 and GFXBench v.2.7.0. To their surprise, they discovered that
when running v.2.5.1, the four powerhouse Cortex-A15 cores were pinned
at their top speed of 1.2GHz no matter what load the benchmark put
upon them. When running v.2.7.0, however, the Exynos 5 Octa switched
over to its less-powerful Cortex-A7 cores.

"A quick check across AnTuTu, Linpack, Benchmark Pi, and Quadrant
reveals the same behavior," they write. The CPUs were gunned to their
highest possible power capabilities when the benchmarks were running.

Digging into the Galaxy S 4's operating system support files, they
came upon one with the name TwDVFSApp.apk, and since DVFS is short for
dynamic voltage and frequency scaling (and, The Reg opines, "Tw" might
be shorthand for "tweaking"), they opened it up in a hex editor and –
behold! – in it were a list of what appeared for all the world to be a
series of strings that allowed for top performance for some apps and
not others, and a group-identification string with a rather
incriminating name.

"The string 'BenchmarkBooster' is a particularly telling one," they write.

The gun may not be belching great clouds of damning smoke, but there's
more than a mere wisp emanating from its barrel. As the AnandTech duo
put it, "This seems to be purely an optimization to produce repeatable
(and high) results in CPU tests, and deliver the highest possible GPU
performance benchmarks."

If Nebuchadnezzar, Shimpi, and Klug are correct in their testing and
analysis – and we have no reason to believe that they're not – there's
only one possible conclusion: Samsung is cheating. And if they're
cheating, there's a fair chance that others are, as well. But Samsung
got caught.

Your Reg reporter has been around the technology-evaluation block
enough times to remember – as Shimpi and Klug discuss in the
conclusion to their article – when benchmark manipulation was rampant
in the PC industry. As the director of a product-testing lab in the
90s, such cheating was the bane of my 9-to-5 existence.

Well, here it comes again – both fairly blatantly, as in Samsung's CPU
and GPU rigging, or in a more slippery fashion, as in the use of an
Intel-specific compiler in a test that enabled Chipzilla's Clover
Trail+ platform to outperform ARM processors.

Today is different from the 90s, however. In those far-away days,
speeds and specs were important even to consumers, while in today's
shiny-shiny world, the average fandroid or fanboi couldn't care less
about gigatexels or TMUs. "Experience" rules the checkbooks of the
marketplace, not benchmark scores.

But deceit is still not right. Having experienced Samsung's chicanery
directly, let's give our cheater-finders the last word on this sorry
state of affairs.

Shimpi and Klug: "Just because we've seen things like this happen in
the past however doesn't mean they should happen now."

Nebuchadnezzar: "Oh hell Samsung, shame on you!" ®
Bootnote

Here's a li'l fairness v. bias test we suggest you might find
personally illuminating. Read the story above one more time, except
each time you see the word "Samsung", substitute "Apple".

Then ask yourself: "Is my response any different?"
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Office Mobile for Android smartphones looks great on the HTC One (Gallery)

Posted on 10:38 AM by Unknown

Office Mobile comes to Android smartphones

Mary Jo already posted about the release of Office for Android
smartphones and Larry offered up his thoughts on the new software.
Since I previously posted a side-by-side gallery of Office Mobile for
the iPhone compared to the native Office Mobile client on Windows
Phone 8 I wanted to also give you a look at Office Mobile for Android
smartphones.

As you can see in this short screenshot gallery, Microsoft was able to
bring the same experience seen on Windows Phone 8 devices and the
iPhone to Android smartphones. Given that Android smartphones have the
largest displays of these three smartphone platforms, I think users
may find the Android version the most useful of all.

A key difference between what I have on my new Nokia Lumia 1020 and
what we get with the iPhone and Android phones is that an Office 365
subscription is required on iOS and Android while Windows Phone owners
get native Office without requiring the service.

I am running Office Mobile on my fantastic HTC One, I still believe it
is the best smartphone I have ever used, and it looks great. I felt
squeezed by the small iPhone display, but that is not the case on the
1080p 4.7 inch HTC One display. The layout for some editing tools and
menus are a bit different on each platform and I personally find that
iOS and Android are a bit more refined and user friendly.

Those of us who have been around the mobile world for a while will
remember paying upwards of $50 for applications that allowed us to
work with word documents and spreadsheets and I remember long
discussions and comparisons about getting chart support in those apps.
Office Mobile on today's modern smartphones functions well and is an
incredible value for those who need native Office support.

It is nice to have Office functionality on all my different
smartphones and while some people are happy with services like Google
Docs or even the new Quip word processor nothing beats having the
ability to jump in and edit native Office files. Microsoft is a
software company at its core and I think this is a smart move to
finally get Office on all mobile platforms.
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Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Zimbabweans head for polls amid rigging claims.

Posted on 10:14 PM by Unknown

Zimbabweans head for polls amid rigging claims.
On Tuesday, incumbent Robert Mugabe said he would resign after 33
years in power if he loses.
His remarks came as Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai's Movement for
Democratic Change (MDC) party accused Zanu-PF of doctoring the
electoral roll. Zanu-PF denied the accusation.
Campaigning has been peaceful, with no reports of violence or intimidation.
The last presidential poll five years ago were overshadowed by myriad
problems, including violence.
Voting begins at 07:00 (05:00 GMT) and close at 19:00 (17:00 GMT),
with results expected within five days.
The situation has been relatively calm ahead of the poll, with most
bars in the capital Harare full on Tuesday night, given that Wednesday
was declared a holiday to allow for voting, the BBC's Brian Hungwe
reports from Harare.
Amongst the topics discussed by Harareans on the eve of the poll was
the conduct of parties before the elections, and the political
implications of victory or defeat for Mr Mugabe, our correspondent
adds.
A large turn out is expected, given the tens of thousands of people
who have gone to rallies staged by the candidates in recent weeks.
Jovial mood
Zanu-PF responded to the allegations surrounding the electoral roll by
saying it was the responsibility of the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission
(Zec), which released the roll only on the eve of polls.
A Zanu-PF spokesman pointed out that appointees from both parties are
on the commission and accused the MDC Finance Minister Tendai Biti of
not funding Zec properly.
Zec has not commented on the allegations.
A BBC correspondent who saw the electoral roll seen the document and
says it features the names of thousands of dead people.
Some names also appear twice or three times with variations to their
ID numbers or home address.
The two long-time rivals have been sharing power since 2009, under a
deal brokered by the regional bloc to end conflict that marred
elections in 2008.
At a press conference at State House in the capital, Harare, Mr Mugabe
told journalists that he and Mr Tsvangirai had learnt to work together
and could even share a pot of tea.
Responding to a question from the BBC, the president, who was in a
jovial mood, said he would step down if he lost and insisted that
there had been "no cheating".
But the MDC has said the electoral roll released on Tuesday by Zec
dates back to 1985 and is full of anomalies.
Three other candidates are also standing for president and voters will
also be electing news members of parliament.
Bulawayo-based journalist Thabo Kunene told the BBC that many
Zimbabweans have been returning home from South Africa to vote.
Taxis and buses carrying the exiles continued to arrive in the
southern city on Tuesday afternoon, he said.
In Bulawayo's oldest township of Makhokhoba, MDC and Zanu-PF campaign
teams met amicably at one house during their door-to-door campaign -
waving each other's flags - a sign that some Zimbabweans have matured
and no longer believed in violence, he added.
In 2008, Mr Tsvangirai pulled out of run-off vote, accusing pro-Mugabe
militias and the security forces of attacking his supporters after he
gained most votes in the first round.

© CopyRight- http://www.bbc.co.uk/
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Barclays Plans to Raise Up to $12 Billion in New Capital.

Posted on 8:48 PM by Unknown

Updated, 8:40 p.m. | Nearly a year after taking over as chief
executive of Barclays, Antony P. Jenkins is still wrestling with the
bank's past wrongdoings.
Mr. Jenkins, 52, took another step on Tuesday to rebuild Barclays'
tarnished reputation when he announced that the bank planned to raise
up to £7.8 billion, or $12 billion, in new capital.
In doing so, Barclays bowed to pressure from British regulators, who
this year called for it to improve its so-called leverage ratio, a
measure of how much borrowed money a bank uses, after the figure was
deemed to be too low.
Barclays, the only major British institution regulators cited, had
objected to the tougher targets. Its announcement on Tuesday, analysts
said, was a sign that British authorities were now willing to require
the country's largest financial institutions to abide by stricter
regulation.
"The regulator has had a big say on how Barclays is raising its
capital," said Chirantan Barua, a banking analyst at Sanford C.
Bernstein in London. "Why would any C.E.O. want to dilute his
company's stock if he didn't have to?"
The regulatory demands are the latest of several run-ins between
Barclays and local authorities in the last two years and follow recent
scandals that have engulfed the bank.
Barclays reached a $450 million settlement with American and British
authorities in June 2012 over the manipulation of benchmark interest
rates, and has set aside billions of dollars for charges related to
inappropriate sales of insurance and other complex financial products
to consumers.
"We did get things wrong," Mr. Jenkins told reporters on Tuesday. "We
were too aggressive and too short-term. It's going to be a five- to
10-year journey to change the culture at Barclays."
And the bank may face more legal woes.
Barclays said on Tuesday that it was contesting undisclosed
preliminary findings from an investigation into the legality of
payments to Qatari investors as part of a rescue fund-raising deal for
the bank in the 2008 financial crisis.
The Middle Eastern sovereign wealth fund Qatar Holding invested a
combined £5.3 billion in Barclays in two stages in 2008, and the
British investigation has focused on the role in the agreements of
four current and former senior employees, including the bank's finance
director, Christopher G. Lucas.
The Justice Department and Securities and Exchange Commission also are
investigating the activity, which might have violated the Foreign
Corrupt Practices Act. Barclays said it was cooperating with the
authorities.
"It's hard to say when all the regulatory problems for Barclays will
be over," Mr. Barua said. "I don't think you can call it an end for at
least two or three more years." Barclays also said on Tuesday that it
had set aside an additional £2 billion in the second quarter related
to what regulators have determined to be inappropriate sales of
insurance and complex financial hedging products to some of its
clients.
Barclays has now made provisions of almost £3 billion since the
beginning of 2012 to cover legal costs related to the sale of products
ruled out of bounds by regulators.
The legal costs weighed on Barclays' second-quarter results, as the
bank reported a £168 million loss, compared with a £746 million profit
in the second quarter of 2012. Barclays' second-quarter revenue fell
less than 1 percent, to £7.3 billion.
As part of the capital plans announced on Tuesday, Barclays said it
would raise £5.8 billion through a rights issue of stock that would
allow current investors to buy one share for every four shares they
own at a 40.1 percent discount to the bank's closing share price on
Monday.
The bank also plans to issue as much as to £2 billion of so-called
contingent capital, financial instruments that convert to equity if a
bank's capital falls below a certain threshold. Barclays also said it
would reduce assets on its balance sheet by as much as £80 billion and
use part of its profits to improve its leverage ratio to 3 percent by
June 2014.
Shares of Barclays tumbled 5.7 percent Tuesday in trading in London,
where the bank is based. Over the last three trading sessions, the
stock has fallen nearly 10 percent in anticipation of a capital
increase.
While Mr. Jenkins acknowledged that raising the capital might dilute
investors' stake in Barclays, he added that the plan would help
reassure shareholders about the bank's financial strength.
"It's about doing the right thing for the long term," he
said.Barclays, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, Bank of America Merrill
Lynch and Citigroup are coordinating the planned £5.8 billion capital
offering by Barclays.


© CopyRight- http://dealbook.nytimes.com/
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