Jumat, 30 Agustus 2013

U.S. probe into JPMorgan hiring practices widens: Bloomberg




"HONG KONG (Reuters) - U.S. government investigations into the hiring practices of JPMorgan in China have uncovered evidence including a spreadsheet that links hires to specific deals, Bloomberg News reported, citing people with knowledge of the matter.

The Justice Department has joined the Securities and Exchange Commission in looking into whether JPMorgan hired people in China because their family members would in turn offer business to the bank, the report said, citing one of the people.

The probe, which had initially centered on the bank's Hong Kong office, has also widened to include countries across Asia and more than 200 interns and full-time staff, according to the Bloomberg report.

The investigation could see the U.S. bank charged under the Foreign Corrupt Practices act, which prevents companies from paying cash or providing anything of value to government employees in order to win business.

While banks have always sought to hire staff with influential connections to government and clients, a practice which is not illegal, the probe centers on so-called sham roles in which the employee is taken on purely for those connections and does little or no other work for the bank.

Marie Cheung, a JPMorgan spokeswoman based in Hong Kong, referred Reuters to a previous comment saying the bank is cooperating fully with regulators and declined to comment further.

Press officers for the SEC and Justice department did not immediately respond to messages left when contacted outside U.S. business hours.

(Reporting by Lawrence White in HONG KONG; Additional reporting by Douwe Miedema in WASHINGTON; Editing by Ryan Woo)"





US fast food workers strike to supersize wages




"Thousands of workers at McDonald's and other fast food outlets across the United States went on strike Thursday in a growing movement for higher wages.

Workers in 60 cities joined the strike to fight for $15 an hour -- double what most currently earn -- and the right to form a union without retaliation, organizers said.

Protesters gathered outside a McDonald's on New York's posh Fifth Avenue at dawn and workers put down burgers and fries across the country in what organizers called the largest-ever strike to hit the $200 billion fast-food industry.

"They make millions that come from our feet. They can afford to pay us better," Shaniqua Davis, 20, told AFP.

Davis has a one-year-old child and works at a branch of the restaurant in the Bronx where she earns $7.25 an hour.

"I have bills to pay. I need to buy diapers. I can hardly buy food. I am treated good but we need more money."

She said if it wasn't for food stamps and help she received to pay her rent "I would already be on the street."

Tyeisha Batts, 27, works at a Burger King in Manhattan after being fired from her previous job at Wendy's for "taking a break without permission."

She works only 28 hours a week, "because if you work 30 hours they have to give you health insurance."

Batts earns between $80 and $100 a week, but has to pay $30 a week to take the subway from her home in Brooklyn.

"They make millions of profit. We deserve better," she said.

The protest movement first began in New York last November with a strike by 200 workers but quickly spread across the country with strikes in July taking place in Chicago, Detroit, Flint, Kansas City, Milwaukee and St Louis.

On Thursday organizers said the strike will hit some 1,000 major fast-food restaurants, including Burger King, Wendy's, Taco Bell, Pizza Hut and KFC.

"Hold the burgers, hold the fries, make worker wages supersize!" read a tweet from Fight for 15, a workers organizing committee.

Many of the three million fast-food workers in America don't work full-time and cannot count on tips like those who staff bars and restaurants.

"Many of these workers have children and are trying to support a family," said Mary Kay Henry of the Service Employees International Union, which is supporting the strike.

"The median wage (including managerial staff) of $9.08 an hour still falls far below the federal poverty line for a worker lucky enough to get 40 hours a week and never have to take a sick day."

As the movement goes viral, it has become clear that the traditional image of a McDonald's worker -- a carefree adolescent flipping burgers until something better comes along -- has changed.

"More people are looking to this as a real job rather than a transition or entry-level job," said Jefferson Cowie, of Cornell University's Department of Labor Relations, Law, and History.

He told AFP the workers who had gone on strike had chosen "to improve the job rather than improve their prospects by going somewhere else."

Cowie said that while wages have stagnated in the industry since the 1970s, "the recession really did not help." Neither has unemployment and increased difficulty in accessing higher education.

"Class mobility has gone way down in the United States."

During the previous strike in July, McDonald's said workers' individual contracts were a matter for the franchisees who operate more than 80 percent of the company's outlets around the world.

"Employees are paid competitive wages and have access to a range of benefits to meet their individual needs," the company said.

Cowie said he was not optimistic for the short-term success of the strike, highlighting McDonald's point that each franchise is owned by an individual rather than the enterprise.

"It's a really important social pressure (but) they are not going to change things overnight. It will be a huge long-term struggle.""





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Saturn Moon Titan Sports Thick Icy Shell & Bizarre Interior




" The tough icy shell of Saturn's largest moon Titan is apparently far stronger than previously thought, researchers say.

These surprising new findings add to hints Titan possesses an extraordinarily bizarre interior, scientists added.

Past research suggested Titan has an ocean hidden under its outer icy shell 30 to 120 miles (50 to 200 kilometers) thick. Investigators aim to explore this underground ocean in the hopes of finding alien life on Titan, since virtually wherever there is water on Earth, there is life. [See more photos of Titan, Saturn's largest moon]

To learn more about Titan's icy shell, planetary scientist Doug Hemingway at the University of California, Santa Cruz, analyzed the Cassini probe's scans of Titan's gravity field. The strength of the gravitational pull any point on a surface exerts depends on the amount of mass underneath it. The stronger the pull, the more the mass.

The researchers then compared these gravity results with the structure of Titan's surface. They expected that regions of high elevation would have the strongest gravitational pull, since one might suppose they had extra matter underneath them. Conversely, they expected regions of low elevation would have the weakest gravitational pull.

What the investigators discovered shocked them. The regions of high elevation on Titan had the weakest gravitational pull.

"It was very surprising to see that," Hemingway told SPACE.com. "We assumed at first that we got things wrong, that we were seeing the data backwards, but after we ran out of options to make that finding go away, we came up with a model that explains these observations."

To explain these gravity anomalies, Hemingway said to imagine mountains on Titan having roots. "It's like how most of an iceberg actually lies submerged underwater," he said. "If that root is really big, bigger than normal, it would displace water underneath it."

Ice has a lower density than water — a chunk of ice weighs less than a similar volume of water. These high-elevation areas on Titan apparently have roots large enough to displace a lot of water under them, meaning they exert a weaker gravitational pull.

Ice is buoyant in water. "In order to essentially hold these big icebergs down and keep them from bobbing up, that means Titan's shell has to be extremely rigid," Hemingway said.

It remains uncertain what makes Titan's shell this rigid. The ice might possess cage-like molecules known as clathrates that could make it stiffer. Also, "if the ocean underneath the shell is colder than before thought, that could make the ice shell thicker and thus more rigid," Hemingway said.

This rigidity could mean Titan's shell is less geologically active than once thought. "If at least the top 40 kilometers (25 miles) is very stiff and cold and dead, if you want something like cryovolcanoes that erupt water instead of lava on Titan's surface, you have to be more creative about how that might happen," Hemingway said.

Their model also suggests Titan's shell has seen an extensive amount of erosion, with features carved more than 650 feet (200 meters) deep on it surface. "We now need different groups of people to figure out how so much material could get broken up and transported long distances across Titan's surface," Hemingway said.

One implication of these new findings relates to whether or not Titan's interior is separated into distinct layers. If researchers have underestimated Titan's gravity field, one might suspect its core is a giant blob of matter that is not made up of distinct layers as one would expect from such a large body. For instance, Earth is separated into a crust, mantle and core, and even large asteroids such as Vesta seem to have interiors divided into several layers.

"Maybe Titan is a mixture of ice and rock from the core nearly all the way out, and it's only in the last part near its surface that it's differentiated into ice and water," Hemingway said. "But we could be wrong there."

To help solve this mystery, "what we need is a Titan orbiter," Hemingway said. "That way we can have much better readings of Titan and learn more about its ice shell and its interior."

The scientists detailed their findings in the Aug. 29 issue of the journal Nature.

Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook and Google+. Original article on SPACE.com."





Saturn Moon Titan Sports Thick Icy Shell & Bizarre Interior




" The tough icy shell of Saturn's largest moon Titan is apparently far stronger than previously thought, researchers say.

These surprising new findings add to hints Titan possesses an extraordinarily bizarre interior, scientists added.

Past research suggested Titan has an ocean hidden under its outer icy shell 30 to 120 miles (50 to 200 kilometers) thick. Investigators aim to explore this underground ocean in the hopes of finding alien life on Titan, since virtually wherever there is water on Earth, there is life. [See more photos of Titan, Saturn's largest moon]

To learn more about Titan's icy shell, planetary scientist Doug Hemingway at the University of California, Santa Cruz, analyzed the Cassini probe's scans of Titan's gravity field. The strength of the gravitational pull any point on a surface exerts depends on the amount of mass underneath it. The stronger the pull, the more the mass.

The researchers then compared these gravity results with the structure of Titan's surface. They expected that regions of high elevation would have the strongest gravitational pull, since one might suppose they had extra matter underneath them. Conversely, they expected regions of low elevation would have the weakest gravitational pull.

What the investigators discovered shocked them. The regions of high elevation on Titan had the weakest gravitational pull.

"It was very surprising to see that," Hemingway told SPACE.com. "We assumed at first that we got things wrong, that we were seeing the data backwards, but after we ran out of options to make that finding go away, we came up with a model that explains these observations."

To explain these gravity anomalies, Hemingway said to imagine mountains on Titan having roots. "It's like how most of an iceberg actually lies submerged underwater," he said. "If that root is really big, bigger than normal, it would displace water underneath it."

Ice has a lower density than water — a chunk of ice weighs less than a similar volume of water. These high-elevation areas on Titan apparently have roots large enough to displace a lot of water under them, meaning they exert a weaker gravitational pull.

Ice is buoyant in water. "In order to essentially hold these big icebergs down and keep them from bobbing up, that means Titan's shell has to be extremely rigid," Hemingway said.

It remains uncertain what makes Titan's shell this rigid. The ice might possess cage-like molecules known as clathrates that could make it stiffer. Also, "if the ocean underneath the shell is colder than before thought, that could make the ice shell thicker and thus more rigid," Hemingway said.

This rigidity could mean Titan's shell is less geologically active than once thought. "If at least the top 40 kilometers (25 miles) is very stiff and cold and dead, if you want something like cryovolcanoes that erupt water instead of lava on Titan's surface, you have to be more creative about how that might happen," Hemingway said.

Their model also suggests Titan's shell has seen an extensive amount of erosion, with features carved more than 650 feet (200 meters) deep on it surface. "We now need different groups of people to figure out how so much material could get broken up and transported long distances across Titan's surface," Hemingway said.

One implication of these new findings relates to whether or not Titan's interior is separated into distinct layers. If researchers have underestimated Titan's gravity field, one might suspect its core is a giant blob of matter that is not made up of distinct layers as one would expect from such a large body. For instance, Earth is separated into a crust, mantle and core, and even large asteroids such as Vesta seem to have interiors divided into several layers.

"Maybe Titan is a mixture of ice and rock from the core nearly all the way out, and it's only in the last part near its surface that it's differentiated into ice and water," Hemingway said. "But we could be wrong there."

To help solve this mystery, "what we need is a Titan orbiter," Hemingway said. "That way we can have much better readings of Titan and learn more about its ice shell and its interior."

The scientists detailed their findings in the Aug. 29 issue of the journal Nature.

Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook and Google+. Original article on SPACE.com."





Saturn Moon Titan Sports Thick Icy Shell & Bizarre Interior




" The tough icy shell of Saturn's largest moon Titan is apparently far stronger than previously thought, researchers say.

These surprising new findings add to hints Titan possesses an extraordinarily bizarre interior, scientists added.

Past research suggested Titan has an ocean hidden under its outer icy shell 30 to 120 miles (50 to 200 kilometers) thick. Investigators aim to explore this underground ocean in the hopes of finding alien life on Titan, since virtually wherever there is water on Earth, there is life. [See more photos of Titan, Saturn's largest moon]

To learn more about Titan's icy shell, planetary scientist Doug Hemingway at the University of California, Santa Cruz, analyzed the Cassini probe's scans of Titan's gravity field. The strength of the gravitational pull any point on a surface exerts depends on the amount of mass underneath it. The stronger the pull, the more the mass.

The researchers then compared these gravity results with the structure of Titan's surface. They expected that regions of high elevation would have the strongest gravitational pull, since one might suppose they had extra matter underneath them. Conversely, they expected regions of low elevation would have the weakest gravitational pull.

What the investigators discovered shocked them. The regions of high elevation on Titan had the weakest gravitational pull.

"It was very surprising to see that," Hemingway told SPACE.com. "We assumed at first that we got things wrong, that we were seeing the data backwards, but after we ran out of options to make that finding go away, we came up with a model that explains these observations."

To explain these gravity anomalies, Hemingway said to imagine mountains on Titan having roots. "It's like how most of an iceberg actually lies submerged underwater," he said. "If that root is really big, bigger than normal, it would displace water underneath it."

Ice has a lower density than water — a chunk of ice weighs less than a similar volume of water. These high-elevation areas on Titan apparently have roots large enough to displace a lot of water under them, meaning they exert a weaker gravitational pull.

Ice is buoyant in water. "In order to essentially hold these big icebergs down and keep them from bobbing up, that means Titan's shell has to be extremely rigid," Hemingway said.

It remains uncertain what makes Titan's shell this rigid. The ice might possess cage-like molecules known as clathrates that could make it stiffer. Also, "if the ocean underneath the shell is colder than before thought, that could make the ice shell thicker and thus more rigid," Hemingway said.

This rigidity could mean Titan's shell is less geologically active than once thought. "If at least the top 40 kilometers (25 miles) is very stiff and cold and dead, if you want something like cryovolcanoes that erupt water instead of lava on Titan's surface, you have to be more creative about how that might happen," Hemingway said.

Their model also suggests Titan's shell has seen an extensive amount of erosion, with features carved more than 650 feet (200 meters) deep on it surface. "We now need different groups of people to figure out how so much material could get broken up and transported long distances across Titan's surface," Hemingway said.

One implication of these new findings relates to whether or not Titan's interior is separated into distinct layers. If researchers have underestimated Titan's gravity field, one might suspect its core is a giant blob of matter that is not made up of distinct layers as one would expect from such a large body. For instance, Earth is separated into a crust, mantle and core, and even large asteroids such as Vesta seem to have interiors divided into several layers.

"Maybe Titan is a mixture of ice and rock from the core nearly all the way out, and it's only in the last part near its surface that it's differentiated into ice and water," Hemingway said. "But we could be wrong there."

To help solve this mystery, "what we need is a Titan orbiter," Hemingway said. "That way we can have much better readings of Titan and learn more about its ice shell and its interior."

The scientists detailed their findings in the Aug. 29 issue of the journal Nature.

Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook and Google+. Original article on SPACE.com."





T-Mobile’s war against AT&T just got even more ridiculous




"T-Mobile has made a habit of needling AT&T ever since John Legere took over as CEO but the company may have pushed things to a whole new level this week. AllThingsD reports that T-Mobile is suing prepaid AT&T subsidiary Aio Wireless because it's allegedly using T-Mobile's "trademark" magenta color in its logo. In its complaint, T-Mobile accuses AT&T of setting up Aio earlier this year as a way to counter its "UNCarrier" initiative and of trying to confuse consumers by giving Aio a magenta logo that it says is strikingly similar to the hue of T-Mobile's logo.

"In early 2013, T-Mobile publicly disclosed plans to compete against the incumbent telecommunications providers in a new way: by offering telecommunications services without the need for consumers to enter into a two-year or annual service contract," T-Mobile said in its complaint. "The dominant telecommunications provider, AT&T, responded by setting up a wholly owned subsidiary, Aio, which — out of all of the colors in the universe — chose magenta to begin promoting no-contract wireless communications services in direct competition with T-Mobile."

If all this seems laughable to you, recall that Legere has in the past talked to a bunch of dolls during one of his press events to ridicule AT&T. Or put another way, nothing is too ridiculous for T-Mobile if the result annoys AT&T.

This article was originally published on BGR.com"





At Visa pour l'Image, proof that photojournalism isn't dead




"When the Chicago Sun-Times laid off its entire photo staff in June, it revived what has become an all-too frequent argument in the media: Do we really need photojournalists?

For some, the iPhone era has ushered in the notion that everybody is a photographer — and sometimes it feels true. Some of the first images of major news events such as the Boston Marathon bombing and the uprising in Egypt came via photos posted on Twitter and other social media sites, where hundreds of pictures are posted every second.

But Jean-François Leroy is on a mission to remind the world that the most enduring news images still come from photojournalists, people who know that documenting the stories the public needs to see often involves more than simply clicking a shutter.

"If you are a photographer, you rarely make a picture by accident. You are working, you are making inquiries, you worked to find your subjects, you worked to get into the position where you could make that picture, you are trying to tell a story," Leroy said. "You are a journalist, someone people can trust. The world needs that. I need that."

And that's the driving principle behind Visa pour l'Image, an annual photo festival founded by Leroy to celebrate the art of photojournalism. The two-week festival, now in its 25th year, kicks off Aug. 31 in Perpignan, France, honoring the best in photojournalism, including photographers who often put their lives at risk to capture horrific images of war and human suffering.

Among those being honored at this year's festival: Joao Silva, a longtime combat photographer, who lost both legs below the knee when he stepped on a landmine while covering the war in Afghanistan in 2010 for The New York Times.

The festival also will feature images from Reuters' Goran Tomasevic, a veteran war photographer who has been covering the constantly shifting front line in Syria, and Phil Moore, a photographer from Agence France-Presse who has been documenting rebel groups in the Congo.

Visa pour l'Image, which is considered one of the most important photo festivals in the world, launched in 1988 when Leroy sensed a lack of appreciation for photojournalism. At the time, there were festivals celebrating fashion and art photography — but none, he thought, that were exclusively dedicated to bringing news photographers together to view each other's work and simply mingle and learn from one another.

At the time, Leroy was a photographer for the French photo agency Sipa Press — though today he insists he was the "worst photographer on earth."

"Ask anyone," he said, with a laugh. "I quickly realized that I was much more talented at promoting work other than my own. … My only talent was creating that gathering point for people."

That first year, 123 photographers and editors showed up for the festival — prompting some to label it a failure. But over the years, the festival has become increasingly popular. Last year, more than 3,000 photo professionals, including 1,200 photographers from 58 countries descended on France for the event — a number that is expected to be on par with this year.

"Everybody was telling me that was I was totally foolish, and that I would never succeed, but we are still kicking," said Leroy, who whittled down several thousand photos to an exhibition that includes a few hundred.

Over the years, Leroy has seen major changes in the industry — among them a shift from film to digital photography and changes in how images are shared around the world. Photos that one used to have to wait to see in newspapers and magazines are now readily available almost instantaneously on the Internet.

But with that accessibility has come serious questions about the long-term viability of photojournalism. Long before the Sun-Times canned its photo staff, newspapers and magazines already were cutting back sharply on photo budgets in favor of images snapped by freelancers or even amateurs armed with cell phones.

The developments have alarmed photographers who try to make a living shooting the news, amid declarations by some in the media that photojournalism is simply a dying profession.

But Leroy sees his role as something of an evangelist for the industry, using Visa pour l'Image to offer proof to the public that photojournalism is not dead but is rather thriving in spite of those who view it as the most disposable part of the ever-shrinking media landscape. As in years past, he calls the images he'll feature at this year's festival as evidence that photojournalism deserves to be valued.

"Every year, people have said 'Photojournalism is dying,' but every year, we've proven the opposite," Leroy said.

Amid the rise of iPhones and tools that have made taking photos easier, Leroy acknowledged the industry has been flooded by pictures and admits he can't predict where the industry will go in coming years.

But echoing an argument that has been made about reporters, he repeatedly emphasized a need to be able to "trust" the sources where media comes from — whether it is photos or writing — in an era where information could be easily corruptible by governments or people trying to push their own narratives.

"My point, my fight is to remind everybody that we need real journalists, not only photographers, but real journalists who are witnessing and who I can trust," Leroy said."





Lady Gaga Wears Sheer Pink Bra, Giant Mermaid-Themed Hairdo in London: Picture




"Lady Gaga will take it off, but she isn't taking it all off just yet! The button-pushing pop singer stepped out of her hotel in London on Tuesday, Aug. 27, in a buzz-worthy ensemble that unabashedly showed off her assets.

Gaga turned heads as she walked gingerly down the steps of her hotel clad in a see-through pink bra and shiny black fisherman-style jumpsuit, complete with suspenders and mile-high black lace-up boots.

To top off her sea-faring look, the 27-year-old singer had her hair teased into a high bow adorned with starfish and shells, and donned her trademark dark shades.

"Thanku so much monsters for sending me so much love this wk!" she tweeted. "You mean the world to me. Cant wait to play new music from ARTPOP this weekend!"

To emphasize her point, the "Applause" singer had the words "art" and "pop" written on the palms of her hands.

On Sunday, Aug. 25, Gaga opened the MTV Video Music Awards with a series of costumes that included, at different points, a white nun-like habit, a sequined jacket, and even a seashell-bikini paired with a barely there thong.

This article originally appeared on Usmagazine.com: Lady Gaga Wears Sheer Pink Bra, Giant Mermaid-Themed Hairdo in London: Picture"





Michael Caine Slams Sean Connery Alzheimer's Quotes as "Completely Preposterous"




"Maybe something just got lost in translation? After German newspaper Bild quoted Michael Caine as saying that his longtime friend Sean Connery had lost his senses and was suffering from memory problems, Caine stepped forward to set the story straight. Speaking with the U.K.'s Daily Record on Monday, Aug. 26, the legendary film star, 80, slammed rumors of the Bond actor's declining mental health as "bulls--t" and denied reports that he ever said otherwise.

"It's completely preposterous, bulls--t," the Oscar winner told the paper. "This stuff about Alzheimer's is just nonsense."

Caine does admit to doing some interviews in Germany for work, but he insists he never said or implied that Connery was ill. "I can only assume that someone has twisted my words or got the wrong end of the stick," he noted.

Bild's story, headlined "Connery Forgets His Life," quoted Caine as saying that "one must have serious concerns" for his former costar. (The two first became friends while filming 1975's The Man Who Would Be King.) The report claimed the actor was "no longer in full control of his senses" and suffered from "noticeable" memory loss.

Caine told the U.K.'s Record, however, that Connery is fine. "I haven't seen Sean for a couple of years, but my wife and I spoke to him on the phone on his birthday this week and he was very well," he said. "He was fine, in complete control of his senses and his usual self. I have no idea where they are getting this stuff from."

"I know Sean was quite ill a year or so ago," he added. "But he is much better now and it was never anything to do with his mental state."

This article originally appeared on Usmagazine.com: Michael Caine Slams Sean Connery Alzheimer's Quotes as "Completely Preposterous""





Joey Divorcing? More ‘N Sync Gigs? Fatone Takes on the Rumors!




"Sorry ladies, Joey Fatone is not back on the market.

After a report surfaced Wednesday morning that Fatone, 36, has been having marital problems with wife Kelly Baldwin, the 'N Sync band member is now shooting down the speculation.

"Omg! Insider's" Keltie Knight was with Joey on Wednesday and he was quick to put the rumor mill to rest.

"We're still married … kids are great," Fatone tells Knight, adding that he and his family recently took a vacation together. "I'm deeply upset about that. We're fine."

[Related: 'NSync Band Members Speak About Reuniting at MTV VMAs]

He adds that he believes the negative attention is due to all the recent media hype surrounding 'N Sync's reunion at the VMAs on Sunday night. "When you're on top, people try to knock you down," he adds. " Things start to get above, 'Let's make something up, let's screw with the media, let's throw things out there,' you know? And that's how it kind of went down."

As for Miley — the topic no one can stop talking about this week — Joey says that there's no truth to speculation that she was high during her racy performance at the VMAs. "[Although] people will say that she was on drugs … she looked fine to me."

And he would know. Joey was hanging out with his former "Hannah Montana" costar backstage before she took the stage for her controversial number.

Finally, although the rest of his fellow band members have all spoken about it already this week, Keltie just had to ask … does he think there's a chance that 'N Sync could tour again?

"That would be a huge negative at the moment because I've never — we've never talked about it, we never discussed it, never have, never did," Joey says.

"It's just more or less kind of doing something for [Justin], you know, like we said. We just wanted to get back together, everybody kind of agreed upon doing it and it wasn't like, 'Hey after this, were going to do this.' There was no discussion about that."

Joey is the last of the five members of 'N Sync to talk about the reunion. Lance Bass discussed it on his SiriusXM radio show "Dirty Pop with Lance Bass" on Monday. Chris Kirkpatrick told a Florida radio station that thanks to the reunion, "We remembered what we love about each other and what we hate about each other." And JC Chasez called into Ryan Seacrest's KISS-FM radio show on Monday, where he explained how the reunion was all Justin Timberlake's idea.

Timberlake himself called into L.A.'s 97.1 AMP radio Tuesday morning to talk about how he had doubts about whether or not he could even pull off his now infamous 15-minute performance. "I haven't really performed like that in a while, so I think was nervous just to see if I could physically make it through it because up until that point, I hadn't really rehearsed the whole performance full out," Timberlake told AMP DJ Booker. "I was gassed.""





Kamis, 29 Agustus 2013

Jessica Simpson Shows Off Son Ace Knute for the First Time




"Nearly two months after giving birth to son Ace Knute, Jessica Simpson is ready to share her baby boy with the world!

The 33-year-old, who welcomed the newest addition on June 30, is debuting her little one on the cover of Us Weekly, posing along with 15-month-old daughter Maxwell.

Jessica Simpson, Maxwell Johnson, and Ace Knute Johnson (UsWeekly)

The mommy-of-two, who has been engaged to fiancé Eric Johnson since November 2010, seems to be happier than ever, telling the mag, "With two kids, we have our hands full, but every day is a new adventure. … It's fun! I feel very at peace with being a mom."

But will the cute couple, who had back-to-back babies, add more to their beautiful brood anytime soon?

"Pregnancy is alot. It was hard to do two so close together," admits the fashion mogul mama. "I have this huge sense of accomplishment, and I feel in my heart that I'm done. But obviously, accidents do happen!"

Check out the video for details on Jessica's life as a mom, and be sure to tune in to "omg! Insider" on TV tonight for more on this story."





Watch 'Duck Dynasty' Star Phil Robertson's Antiabortion Speech: 'You Have a God-Given Right to Live'




"The family members in A&E's monster hit reality series "Duck Dynasty" have always been upfront but not in-your-face about their faith on camera. Off camera, though, the Robertsons are not afraid to loudly proclaim their religious beliefs, including their stance against abortion.

Video surfaced Tuesday of "Duck Dynasty" patriarch Phil Robertson delivering an impassioned speech slamming abortion. "From the time you started inside your mother's womb, Thomas Jefferson had it right," he said. "You have the God-given right to live, for crying out loud."

He continued by holding out a finger. "You're this long! C'mon! You have a God-given right to live. And of all places, inside your mother — what in the world happened to us?"

Robertson, a former standout football quarterback at Louisiana Tech, has been an ardent believer since the '70s. During that time, he "was headed south" — drinking, fighting, mistreating his family. When his wife, Kay, kicked him out, Robertson turned to religion.

Though Robertson feels free to let loose his opinions in a speech, he told the Wall Street Journal in June that his family purposefully plays down their faith on "Duck Dynasty."

"We can't get into spiritual matters on the show too much," he said. "That's a little much for the production company. They say, you know, it's not the Pat Robertson show."

Still, the family doesn't hide their beliefs. And it's possible religion will play a greater role this season, with oldest son Alan — a former minister — joining the cast. In fact, before the season began, Alan said he hoped to spread his message to a bigger audience thanks to the popularity of "Duck Dynasty."

Alan said of leaving his pulpit, "What I do for our church — you see, it's a pretty good-sized church — impacts a lot of people. But because of my association with the show, I'll get to minister to a lot more people.""





Astronaut Snaps Photo of Raging California Wildfire




" A wildfire raging in Northern California can be seen from space.

NASA astronaut Karen Nyberg snapped a photo of the blaze from her post aboard the International Space Station on Saturday (Aug. 24).

"Our orbit took us directly over California's Rim Fire about an hour ago Devastating August 26," Nyberg wrote on her Twitter account, @AstroKarenN.

The Rim Fire, which started on Aug. 17, has burned more than 149,000 acres of land, threatening homes, Yosemite National Park, sequoias and San Francisco's water supply. The fire is now 15 percent contained, with more than 3,000 personnel working to stop its spread. [Yosemite Aflame: Rim Fire in Photos]

"Hundreds of people were forced to evacuate their homes, and roads in the area were closed," NASA's Earth Observatory wrote. "As of Aug. 23, no structures had been reported destroyed, but the fire threatened the towns of Groveland and Pine Mountain Lake."

This has been a somewhat less active year for wildfires compared to other years in recent memory, the Earth Observatory reported. Wildfires have so far charred 3.4 million acres in the United States in 2013, observatory officials said. By comparison, in 2012, wildfires burned more than 9.3 million acres of land, according to statistics provided by the National Interagency Fire Center.

Although this year might be on the lower side of the average, some scientists think that fire risk could increase overall by the end of the century. Hot and dry conditions could lead to an increased risk of fire for the United States, Canada and Mexico.

"Over the last 30, years we have seen an increase in hot and dry conditions that promote fire activity," Doug Morton, a scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., said in a statement. "And across the Western United States and Alaska, satellites show an increase in the area that burns each year over that same time period."

Astronauts aboard the International Space Station have spotted wildfires before. In June 2012, a wildfire in Colorado that consumed 15,517 acres of land was photographed from a window of the orbiting laboratory. A 2011 wildfire burning in Texas was also seen by astronauts onboard the outpost.

Satellites in orbit around the Earth have captured images of the wildfire's progress, as well. On Aug. 22, NASA's Aqua satellite photographed smoke rising from the fire, and a day later, the space agency's Suomi NPP satellite shot a photo of the blaze.

Follow Miriam Kramer @mirikramer and Google+.

Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed."





New Windows operating system sent to computer makers




"Microsoft on Tuesday began sending a revamped version of Windows to makers of computers, smartphones or tablets powered by the software.

"We've hit an important milestone for Microsoft," Windows team executive Antoine Leblond said in a blog post.

"In many ways, this marks a new day for Microsoft, reflecting a number of rapid-release firsts."

Developers of applications tailored to run on Windows devices were irked, however, to find out that they will not get their hands on the finished version of Windows 8.1 until it hits the market in October.

In the past, developers had early access to new versions of Windows to allow time to make sure their applications work with the software.

"Seriously, has Microsoft fallen off its rocker?" a developer asked rhetorically in a chat forum below Leblond's blog post.

"This decision is yet another that leaves me questioning the judgment of Microsoft's current management."

Microsoft in June provided developers with a preview version of the "re-blended" Windows 8 operating system released late last year.

Windows 8.1 incorporated feedback from users and developers, and came with the promise that the US software giant was speeding up its release cycle to adapt to the dizzying pace of innovation in consumer technology.

"Windows 8.1 is a significant update," Leblond said.

"As we consider the code we just handed off, and the new intuitive and fluid computing experience it provides -- anytime, anywhere, across all devices -- we're confident we made the right bet."

Windows 8.1 remains true to the vision of an operating system tuned for touch-screen controls and multi-gadget lifestyles increasingly revolving around tablets and smartphones, according to Microsoft.

Microsoft is under pressure to adapt to a huge shift in how people engage with computers.

Smartphones and tablets have vanquished the days when people devoted the bulk of computer time to Windows-powered desktop or laptop machines.

The overhauled Windows 8 operating system released in November was designed to power the array Internet-linked devices.

Better adapting to the shifting Internet landscape is believed to be among the reasons behind the unexpected announcement last week that Microsoft chief executive Steve Ballmer will retire within 12 months.

"There is never a perfect time for this type of transition, but now is the right time," Ballmer said Friday in a written release.

"My original thoughts on timing would have had my retirement happen in the middle of our company's transformation to a devices and services company. We need a CEO who will be here longer term for this new direction."

Ballmer took over as CEO in 2000 from co-founder Bill Gates, a classmate and friend from their days at Harvard University in the 1970s.

While its Windows software is used on the vast majority of personal computers, Microsoft has had little impact in the fast-growing segments of tablets and smartphones. gc/jm"





Miley's twerking dance officially enters lexicon




""Twerking", the raunchy dance that set tongues wagging when enthusiastically performed by Miley Cyrus at the MTV awards, is one of the new terms to make the latest Oxford dictionary update.

The former Disney child star, now 20, left audience members gobsmacked when she bent over and gyrated provocatively with singer Robin Thicke on his song "Blurred Lines".

The moves, borrowed from US hip-hop culture, have been colloquially known as twerking for around 20 years, but the term has now received official recognition after being included in the latest revision of Oxford Dictionaries Online, it revealed Wednesday.

"By last year, it had generated enough currency to be added to our new words watch list, and by this spring, we had enough evidence of usage frequency in a breadth of sources to consider adding it to our dictionaries of current English," explained Katherine Connor Martin, from Oxford Dictionaries Online.

"There are many theories about the origin of this word, and since it arose in oral use, we may never know the answer for sure.

"The current public reaction to twerking is reminiscent in some ways of how the twisting craze was regarded in the early 1960s, when it was first popularised by Chubby Checker's song, the Twist," she added.

Other new words recognised by the English language gatekeeper include "selfie", for a self-photograph taken on a mobile phone, online currency "Bitcoin" and "hackerspace"."





Rabu, 28 Agustus 2013

What is 'Big Data,' anyway? Authors of a new book try to explain




""Big data" has become a really big buzz-phrase — tossed around in conversations about everything from business to surveillance; cited as a tool to improve driving, hiring, understanding dogs, and everything else; and, inevitably, dismissed as a bunch of hype.

But what exactly is big data, anyway? Big Data: A Revolution That Will Transform How We Live, Work, and Think by Viktor Mayer-Schönberger and Kenneth Cukier, offers an answer. Their book is a wide-ranging assessment of "the ability of society to harness information in novel ways to produce useful insights or goods and services of significant value." And while they acknowledge that the term itself has become amorphous, they frame their subject pretty clearly: "Big data refers to things one can do at a large scale that cannot be done at a smaller one, to extract new insights or create new forms of value, in ways that change markets, organizations, the relationship between citizens and governments, and more."

That (not to mention the book's subtitle) might sound a little hype-y, but Big Data is fairly even-handed: Early chapters explore the hope and potential around the way massive information sets are being created and mined, but later ones are clear about risks, pitfalls, and dangers. Mayer-Schönberger is Professor of Internet Governance and Regulation at the Oxford Internet Institute / Oxford University; Cukier is "data editor" for The Economist. Their book raised a few questions for me — so I asked the authors. Here's what they said.

I'd like to start toward the end: One of your later chapters examines "the dark side of big data," and among other things you note concerns about privacy and the possibility of using "big-data predictions" to in effect penalize people for behavior they seem likely to engage in, but haven't. You even mention the NSA at one point. So I wonder what you've made of the debate about more recent surveillance revelations related to the agency: There's a lot of focus on the collection of the data, for instance, but should we be talking about how it's analyzed?

Kenneth Cukier: The question draws an excellent distinction — one that's sadly missing from the debate. The disclosures have been mostly about the collection and not the use of the data. And when intelligence agencies explain how they work with the data, the method seems oddly old-school: targeted surveillance, not too different from the days of alligator-clips atop copper wires. Of course we're probably not told the whole story and they're actually running massive statistical regressions across all the data to hunt for patterns that they didn't know to look for in advance. That's what Facebook and LinkedIn data-scientists would do with it. But we haven't yet seen evidence that this is what the NSA is doing.

That said, the collection alone is troubling because it is happening with insufficient oversight. And the goal of intelligence is to prevent bad things from happening — it's about prediction. As we lay out in the book, this may be troubling when people are penalized for what they only have propensity to do, not for what they've done. So we have to be very careful using this ability, as it improves to the degree that it becomes more established.

You make a compelling case about the limitations of sampling (as opposed to more comprehensive big data approaches) and how we've come to accept it perhaps more than we should. But among the examples you mention is voter intent. It's not like there's a comprehensive database of who everyone intends to vote for, is there? How does big data actually provide an alternative here? Isn't there a distinction between what we want to measure and what we can measure?

Cukier: Actually, there is a database of every voter and their intentions. Both major parties contract with different data providers that are loosely affiliated with the parties, to tap databases of all Americans. The first variable is if the person is registered to vote and if he or she actually cast a ballot in the most recent election. The Democrats in 2012 had an internal database of every voter in America and asked three questions of it: Do you support Obama; are you likely to vote; and if you are undecided, are you persuadable? By ranking people based on that last measure, the Dems could know where to best spend their advertising budget for maximum impact.

Big data was critical: sampling works well for basic questions like what candidate a person supports. But it's less useful when you want to drill down into the granular — like what candidate Asian-American women with college degrees support. To do that, you may need to give up your sample and go for it all.

Yet the broader point is correct: there is a difference between what we want to measure and what we can measure. And we need to be on guard that we don't confuse the two. For example, in the Vietnam War, the Pentagon used the metric of the body count as a way to measure progress, when that data wasn't really meaningful to what they wanted to depict. Sadly, I fret this fallibility is something that we'll just have to learn to live with, as we have in so many other domains.

Many of your examples involve scrutinizing data that already exists (including instances where it's mined for reasons that have nothing to do with why it was gathered), but I was very interested to learn about "datafication" that involves setting out to collect new information in new ways: For instance, UPS "datifying" its vehicle fleet by gathering mechanical information that predicts and minimizes breakdowns. This almost seem like a distinct category to me. Do you think of it as a fundamentally different form of big data?

Viktor Mayer-Schönberger: It is tempting to be dazzled by the many new types of data that are being collected — from engine sensors in UPS vehicles, to heart rates in

premature babies, to human posture. But that is how datafication works in practice: at first we think it is impossible to render something in data form, then somebody comes up with a nifty and cost-efficient idea to do so, and we are amazed by the applications that this will enable, and then we come to accept it as the new normal. A few years ago, this happened with geo-location data, and before it was with web browsing data (gleaned through cookies). It is a sign of the continuing progress of datafication.

You're right that dataficiation is fundamentally different than big data. For example, the 19th century American navigator Commodore Maury, who invented tidal maps, datafied the logbooks of past sea voyages by extracting information about the wind and waves at a given location. But we can get the most of big data today because so many new elements of our lives are being rendered into a data form, which was extremely hard to do in the past.

You emphasize that making the most of big data means we have to "shed some of [our] obsession for causality in exchange for simple correlations: not knowing why but only what." This means breaking from the tradition of coming up with a hypothesis and testing it: It doesn't matter whether we can explain a correlation that big data reveals, we should just act on it. That's a big shift! I'm curious if when you're out talking about the book whether you get a lot of resistance to that idea, because it seems crucial to what you call the "big data mindset."

Mayer-Schönberger: Yes, we do encounter resistance on this point, but intriguingly, it's rarely from the real experts in their field. They often know how tentative their causal conclusions are, or how much they are actually based on correlations rather than truly comprehending the exact causality of things. Also, we often get mischaracterized as either suggesting that theories don't matter or causality is not important. We don't argue either. In fact, theories will continue to matter very much, but the concrete hypothesis derived from a theory less so.

Take Google Flu Trends. The theory that what people search for could correlate with human health in a given location was crucial for Google Flu Trends to happen. But none of Google's engineers could ever have guessed the exact hypothesis to test — that is, the exact search terms that best predict the spread of the flu. After all, the company handles around 3 billion searches every day. So big data analysis did that for them.

Causal connections are really valuable where and if one can find them. But looking for them at great cost and coming up empty is less useful, we suggest, than looking for correlations — not least because such correlations can help identify what potential connections between two phenomena should be investigated for a possible causal link. In that very sense, big data analysis actually helps causal investigations as well.

Finally, I was struck by how many examples in the book involved businesses that have amassed incredible data sets and learned to use them to boost sales or improve marketing. You have the story of how Wal Mart mined its past data and figured out that people preparing for a hurricane by purchasing flashlights and the like also tended to buy Pop-Tarts — so it put Pop-Tarts at the front of the store during hurricane season, and sales increased. Is there any concern about how much big data is in effect owned by business, and deployed largely in the service of the profit motive? I think one thing that makes people nervous about the big data idea is that it's so often opaque. But do the benefits outweigh those concerns? Should we stop worrying and just be thankful for the conveniently placed Pop-Tarts?

Mayer-Schönberger: There is a value in having conveniently placed Pop-Tarts, and it isn't just that Wal Mart is making more money. It is also that shoppers find faster what they are likely looking for. Sometimes big data gets badly mischaracterized as just a tool to create more targeted advertising online. But UPS uses big data to save millions of gallons of fuel — and thus improve both its bottom line and the environment. Google aiding public health agencies in predicting the spread of the flu, or Decide.com helping consumers save a bundle has nothing to do with targeted advertising, and create positive effects beyond a single company's quarterly profit. We need to cast our gaze wider when we want to understand big data's upside (and incidentally, also its "dark sides").

My thanks to Mayer-Schönberger and Cukier for taking the time to answer these questions. Their book is: Big Data: A Revolution That Will Transform How We Live, Work, and Think. "





Minggu, 25 Agustus 2013

Britney Spears (Celeb Style Snafus)