Friday, May 31, 2013

Sony CEO Calls PS4 'First And Foremost' A Video Game Console ...

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Sony CEO Calls PS4 First And Foremost A Video Game Console

Microsoft?s unveiling of the Xbox One?left many gamers wondering what the Xbox?s future will be like now that it looks as though the company is focusing on everything else besides its ability to be a gaming console. On the other hand, Sony is taking this moment to reiterate its stance on the PlayStation 4 to be first and foremost a gaming console.

During D11, Sony CEO Kazuo Hirai spoke about the company?s focus on making the PlayStation 4 being a console that is built to play games. ?The most important thing we need to make sure we do at least initially is that we all agree and understand that the PS4 is a great video game console that appeals to video gamers,? Hirai said during the event. ?If we miss that part then I don?t think we get the initial establishment of the console. That formula has worked for us with all our consoles, including the PS3.?

That?s not to say Sony isn?t considering additional features for its PlayStation 4 as media apps will certainly play an important role for the console when it?s released, which Hirai says they?ll unveil in the future. ?We take a look at this first and foremost as a game console. We don?t want to end there,? said Hirai. ?That?s an area we will obviously reveal and talk about in the coming months.?

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So How Exactly Is Cloud Computing Changing the VFX Industry ...

Bill Westenhoefer accepts his Oscar at this year's ceremony.

Would you rather render 10,000 hours of footage on 100 machines, or one hour on 1,000,000 machines? The cost is the same. Welcome to the cloud.
?
The cloud is one amongst many reasons the visual effects industry is in turmoil. We have recently seen protests at the Oscars:? Bill Westenhofer?s Oscar speech was apparently cut short by ?censors."? There have been numerous layoffs and buyouts. Industry professionals are questioning the future. And for good reason.

READ MORE:?? It Ain't Easy Being Green-Screened: One VFX Artist Speaks Out at Risk of Being Erased and Replaced
?
What?s clear: the tides are turning because of two related factors, globalization and technology. Advantages remain to continuing traditional VFX work? big companies, expensive render farms, consistent feature film contracts, but long-term economics dictate otherwise. Like in any scenario involving technology-enabled globalization of work, a number of forces contribute to a changing course for industry.? In the case of the VFX industry stuck with firms that haven't adapted, what is left is a group of talented artists in search of a way forward.
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Industry Changes
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?The system has been in an underbidding war for the last decade,? Julian van Mil, visual effects supervisor, told Indiewire. ? Look, ten years ago it was very specialized,? he said, ?There is always the bleeding edge, but now hiring is very democratic.?
?
??There?s a lot of buzz about how to fix the industry,??Kevin Baillie, principle at Atomic Fiction said. ?I personally think that solutions are wrong, that really, instead of looking at how to save the industry, we need to look at how to transform the industry to be compatible with today?s realities.?
?
Within the last ten years the industry underwent immense changes ??ironically pushing many of the very technologies that have enabled remote workforces to take on VFX projects, said?Scott Squires, VFX supervisor,
?? although not the only factor contributing the changing VFX industry.

VFX In The Cloud
?
Overall there are two chief uses VFX artists and firms have for cloud computing: storage and rendering. Storage is important ? but for many VFX artists it?s incidental. Rendering is the vital -- time-consuming -- part of the equation. And rendering is increasingly a task moved onto the cloud.
?
Cloud rendering solves one of, if not the largest barrier to entry in the VFX industry: infrastructure. In the past VFX companies built large data centers called ?render farms? with thousands of CPUs, able to work in tandem to render a single angle, shot, or scene? including off site render farms controlled by third parties. No longer.
?
Flexible Computing

"Because we had the cloud it was easy to ramp up. Of course we had to hire people and find room for desks, but that?s a much quicker thing to do."


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?We knew we didn?t have the budget for a large data center. But we didn?t want to be a data center company, we wanted to be a creative company, ? said Baillie, of Atomic Fiction. Atomic Fiction uses the cloud for 90-95% of its ?heavy data lifting? and has completed notable feature film projects like ?Flight?, ?Star Trek: Into Darkness? and is working on ?Need For Speed.? All without a traditional render farm.
?
Years ago, available, affordable scalability from the cloud allowed Baillie?s company to do the primary VFX work on director Robert Zemeckis? ?Flight.? ?We started with 130 - 140 VFX shots, but ended up with closer to 400,? Baillie said. ?Because we had the cloud it was easy to ramp up. Of course we had to hire people and find room for desks, but that?s a much quicker thing to do.? Baillie went on to point out that it would have been physically impossible to build a traditional render farm, and execute the required VFX within the four month window required.
?
Baillie?s not so secret secret: Zync?s cloud interface. Zync, one of several similar tools, is a plugin compatible with commercial VFX software that lets an artist access cloud-based rendering functions much in the same way as a local render farm.? Zync uses the idle computer time of Amazon's vast data centers they've built all over.? ?There is no difference in a submitted job to a farm versus the cloud,? Van Mil said, in reference to cloud render tools in general, not specifically Zync.
?
?It would have been heartbreaking to have to look Zemeckis in the eye and say: ?we can?t do it,?? Baillie said, ?He?s a childhood hero, it would have been gut-wrenching for the project not to work out.?
?
Real Time Rendering
?
One of the most interesting technologies that will propel cloud render farms to even better performance is graphics processor unit or GPU rendering. GPUs have long been used by gamers to produce stunning graphics in real time, but Van Mil pointed out a piece of software called "octanerender" by Otoy, that harnesses a GPU?s computing power in most commercial 3D packages, ?The GPU and Octane is ushering in a new level of rendering,? Van Mil said.

Using GPUs is uncharted territories for VFX companies.? Only recently did Adobe's Premiere Pro editing software (and the rest of the Adobe Creative Suite) enable some of Nvidia GPUs to do heavy lifting.? In order for VFX companies to use GPUs they would have to spend major money on new graphics cards with GPUs and software licenses for their server farms.?
?
Otoy?s Octane exclusively uses Nvidia?s CUDA GPU technology, and takes advantage of its immense, inexpensive rendering capabilities. Otoy is also building out a specialized Nvidia GPU cloud service that will be as scalable as Amazon?s current CPU cloud computing network. The company claims that it will significantly beat Amazon?s cloud computing price of a couple dollars an hour? although final pricing is not available at the time of writing.
?
?What would have taken several hundred hours, I can now do that on my Mac Pro,? Van Mil said about local render times. According to Otoy,? the technology will provide VFX artists real time render capability, eventually including extremely complex VFX tasks like ray tracing with the cloud.
?
In a recent keynote the graphics card manufacturer Nvidia demonstrated the technology. The graphics card manufacturer displayed real time rendering on a MacBook Air, running a virtual machine tied to a GPU render farm in Los Angeles (the demo was in San Diego).
?
Scalability
?
Decreased cloud render times aren?t just time and money savers, there are creative benefits as well. For smaller VFX shops and freelancers access to cloud services allow them to implement more aggressive, complex 3D shots that normally would require hundreds of thousands of hours of computing time with a small render farm.? ?I may not create certain effects because I can?t afford [or don?t have] the render time,? Van Mil said.
?
But, since ramping up from one to 100 machines, or 1,000 machines can be as simple as changing a drop-down menu, smaller firms can tackle complex projects, with faster turnaround times, Baillie said.
?
Artists individually benefit from access to the cloud since their render capabilities scale with their needs. For example, simulations that involve water can be extremely demanding in terms of hardware rendering time. According to Baillie, artists sometimes used to have to wait overnight to see the results of a few minor changes. The cloud allows an artists to get the results after an hour, Baillie said, which helps keep artists focused on specific parts of a a shot.
?
Another example Prives pointed out was VFX artist Scott Pagano, who designs 3D concert visuals for musicians like Skrillex, Flying Lotus, and Zedd. Prives cited a recent example of an artist requiring an entire live show?s worth of VFX design??four days before the concert date. Because of the cloud, Prives said, Pagano was able to deliver all of the visuals in ?beyond 2K? by the deadline.

Max A. Cherney is a San Francisco based writer/director. His first documentary is due this summer. You can follow him on Twitter @chernandburn.


Source: http://www.indiewire.com/article/so-how-exactly-is-cloud-computing-changing-the-vfx-industry

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Notable words from the National Spelling Bee

OXON HILL, Md. (AP) ? A look at some unusual, difficult or otherwise noteworthy words from the 2013 Scripps National Spelling Bee.

? MELOCOTON ? a peach grafted on a quince root stalk. Grace Remmer, 14, of St. Augustine, Fla., who spells quickly when she knows a word, asked for the definition twice and the etymology twice. She was off by two letters, and that was the end of her fourth and final National Spelling Bee appearance. "Thank you, everyone," she said, and left the stage to a standing ovation.

? GALERE ? a group of people having a marked common quality or relationship. Derived from French and old Catalan, this word nearly bounced superstar speller Arvind Mahankali, 13, of Bayside Hills, N.Y., from the finals. He asked for the etymology twice, shifted his body back and forth and stroked his chin. He started with "g-a," and then asked to start again, getting it right with seconds to spare.

? DORYLINE ? a type of migratory tropical ant that is blind except for the functional males. In the finals, Christal Schermeister, 13, of Pembroke Pines, Fla., stood silently for a long time, trying to figure it out. "Can I have the definition again, please?" she asked, her voice cracking a bit. She went with "d-o-r-a-l-i-n-e" and was eliminated.

? SMELLFUNGUS ? a critic or faultfinder, taken from a novel by 18th-century absurdist Laurence Sterne. Gokul Venkatachalam, 12, of Chesterfield, Mo., spelled it correctly.

? MALACOPHILOUS ? adapted to pollination by snails. "I don't know if that's possible," said aspiring comedy writer Amber Born, 14, of Marblehead, Mass. After spelling the word correctly, she leapt for joy and dashed back to her seat.

? CYANOPE ? a person with fair hair and brown eyes. Caleb Miller, 13, of Calhoun, La., asked if it came from the Greek word "ops," meaning eye. Told yes, he responded, "Thank goodness." He still misspelled the word, going with p-s-i-a-n-o-p-e. Told the correct spelling, he said, "Oh, you've gotta be kidding me."

? BILBOQUET ? a device having a cup or spike at the top of a stick to which is attached a ball on a string. This word looked like it might trip up 11-year-old Vanya Shivashankar of Olathe, Kan., the sister of the 2009 champion and one of the favorites. She paused while pretending to write the word on her hand, a common technique among spellers. But she got it right and advanced to the finals.

? CABOTINAGE ? behavior befitting a second-rate actor. There was no acting from Eva Kitlen, 14, of Niwot, Colo., who struggled with this word, breathing quickly into the microphone, before getting it wrong. "Can I maybe get a different word?" she asked. "I hope you get a different word," pronouncer Jacques Bailly responded. She did not.

? TENERAMENTE ? a musical direction meaning "tenderly." Grace Remmer, who plays violin, chuckled with relief after being asked to spell this word, which helped propel her to the finals. She still asked Bailly to use it in a sentence, which turned out to be a gem: "The piano teacher repeatedly encouraged the Incredible Hulk to try to play the lullaby teneramente."

? OLEACRANON ? the clinical term for the funny bone. Emily Keaton, 14, of Pikeville, Ky., missed this word by adding an "h'' after the "c." She jumped back with surprise at the sound of the bell that ended her spelling bee career. Emily was a five-time National Spelling Bee contestant.

___

Follow Ben Nuckols on Twitter at https://twitter.com/APBenNuckols.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/notable-words-national-spelling-bee-224031427.html

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Eat, Drink and Party With Italians at Gina's Homemade Food Rave ...

When it comes to hand-made artisan Italian food products in the Valley we turn to Gina Buskirk of Gina's Homemade.

Next month they want to share their homemade goodies in epic proportions at their inaugural Italian Food Rave, a "night where more is more."

See also:
Gina's Homemade Opens Shop in Northeast Scottsdale
Score Small Bites of Summer at 30 Restaurants in Metro Phoenix

On Saturday, June 8 from 7 to 10 p.m. the folks at Gina's Homemade will be serving up an Italian feast for a limited number of guests.

The final menu for the event will be a secret until the day of but guests can be sure they won't leave hungry. The four-course feast will include Italian Specialty meats, handcrafted artisan cheeses, handmade pasta dishes and authentic Italian dessert as well as wine tastings. Live music and glow sticks will also be provided.

A ticket to the rave costs $85 a person and can be purchased online. For more information about Gina's Homemade visit the Gina's Homemade website.

Follow Chow Bella on Facebook, Twitter, and Pinterest.

Source: http://blogs.phoenixnewtimes.com/bella/2013/05/ginas_homemade_food_rave_june_2013.php

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Thursday, May 30, 2013

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Switched on Bach: David Cope's computer compositions

Image

Professor David Cope speaks in purposeful abstraction, attempting to brace us for what we're about to see. We've been on the road for a while now, I tell him. We've seen a lot of strange and wonderful things -- robots and space shuttles and ghost hunts. "Yes, well," he answers quietly, as we ascend the stairs of his Santa Cruz, Calif., home. "I guarantee you've never seen a laboratory like this."

It's hard to say precisely what we've gotten ourselves into. It's a fairly standard suburban house from the outside, a few blocks from the base of the hill that holds the University of Santa Cruz. In amongst a forest of redwoods, it overlooks the pristine wilderness of the central coast that so famously inspired Kerouac, Miller and Steinbeck. Cope, a lifelong music professor, wears a denim jacket, floral button-up, white stubble and a sly smile. If there exists a walking manifestation of Santa Cruz, it might well be him. It's the perfect uniform for an unassuming computer music pioneer.

There's nothing of particular note to speak of downstairs in the living room, where Cope gives lessons on a grand piano littered with any number of music books. When we first arrive, Cope's wife answers the door slightly confused and momentarily sure that we're there to sell magazines -- the professor, it seems, has forgotten to inform her that our arrival has been pushed up by an hour. From upstairs, Cope suggests we shoot the art lining the walls above the piano as he readies himself for our conversation. "I made them on a computer!" he excitedly exclaims about the planetary orbs and psychedelic swirls -- mathematical, formulaic interactions imprinted into a bronzed-aluminum backing. They're a small selection of a seemingly infinite and diverse collection of Cope's artistic expressions that decorate the house.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/BAy-jLhSI5U/

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Disappearance of stromatolites, earliest visible manifestation of life: Ancient enigma solved?

May 28, 2013 ? The widespread disappearance of stromatolites, the earliest visible manifestation of life on Earth, may have been driven by single-celled organisms called foraminifera.

The findings, by scientists at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI); Massachusetts Institute of Technology; the University of Connecticut; Harvard Medical School; and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, were published online the week of May 27 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Stromatolites ("layered rocks") are structures made of calcium carbonate and shaped by the actions of photosynthetic cyanobacteria and other microbes that trapped and bound grains of coastal sediment into fine layers. They showed up in great abundance along shorelines all over the world about 3.5 billion years ago.

"Stromatolites were one of the earliest examples of the intimate connection between biology -- living things -- and geology -- the structure of the Earth itself," said WHOI geobiologist Joan Bernhard, lead author of the study.

The growing bacterial community secreted sticky compounds that bound the sediment grains around themselves, creating a mineral "microfabric" that accumulated to become massive formations. Stromatolites dominated the scene for more than two billion years, until late in the Proterozoic Eon.

"Then, around 1 billion years ago, their diversity and their fossil abundance begin to take a nosedive," said Bernhard. All over the globe, over a period of millions of years, the layered formations that had been so abundant and diverse began to disappear. To paleontologists, their loss was almost as dramatic as the extinction of the dinosaurs millions of years later, although not as complete: Living stromatolites can still be found today, in limited and widely scattered locales, as if a few velociraptors still roamed in remote valleys.

While the extinction of the dinosaurs has largely been explained by the impact of a large meteorite, the crash of the stromatolites remains unsolved. "It's one of the major questions in Earth history," said WHOI microbial ecologist Virginia Edgcomb, a co-author on the paper.

Just as puzzling is the sudden appearance in the fossil record of different formations called thrombolites ("clotted stones"). Like stromatolites, thrombolites are produced through the action of microbes on sediment and minerals. Unlike stromatolites, they are clumpy, rather than finely layered.

It's not known whether stromatolites became thrombolites, or whether thrombolites arose independently of the decline in strombolites. Hypotheses proposed to explain both include changes in ocean chemistry and the appearance of multicellular life forms that might have preyed on the microbes responsible for their structure.

Bernhard and Edgcomb thought foraminifera might have played a role. Foraminifera (or "forams," for short) are protists, the kingdom that includes amoeba, ciliates, and other groups formerly referred to as "protozoa." They are abundant in modern-day oceanic sediments, where they use numerous slender projections called pseudopods to engulf prey, to move, and to continually explore their immediate environment. Despite their known ability to disturb modern sediments, their possible role in the loss of stromatolites and appearance of thrombolites had never been considered.

The researchers examined modern stromatolites and thrombolites from Highborne Cay in the Bahamas for the presence of foraminifera. Using microscopic and rRNA sequencing techniques, they found forams in both kinds of structures. Thrombolites were home to a greater diversity of foraminifera and were especially rich in forams that secrete an organic sheath around themselves. These "thecate" foraminifera were probably the first kinds of forams to evolve, not long (in geologic terms) before stromatolites began to decline.

"The timing of their appearance corresponds with the decline of layered stromatolites and the appearance of thrombolites in the fossil record," said Edgcomb. "That lends support to the idea that it could have been forams that drove their evolution."

Next, Bernhard, Edgcomb, and postdoctoral investigator Anna McIntyre-Wressnig created an experimental scenario that mimicked what might have happened a billion years ago.

"No one will ever be able to re-create the Proterozoic exactly, because life has evolved since then, but you do the best you can," Edgcomb said.

They started with chunks of modern-day stromatolites collected at Highborne Cay, and seeded them with foraminifera found in modern-day thrombolites. Then they waited to see what effect, if any, the added forams had on the stromatolites.

After about six months, the finely layered arrangement characteristic of stromatolites had changed to a jumbled arrangement more like that of thrombolites. Even their fine structure, as revealed by CAT scans, resembled that of thrombolites collected from the wild. "The forams obliterated the microfabric," said Bernhard.

That result was intriguing, but it did not prove that the changes in the structure were due to the activities of the foraminifera. Just being brought into the lab might have caused the changes. But the researchers included a control in their experiment: They seeded foraminifera onto freshly-collected stromatolites as before, but also treated them with colchicine, a drug that prevented them from sending out pseudopods. "They're held hostage," said Bernhard. "They're in there, but they can't eat, they can't move."

After about six months, the foraminifera were still present and alive -- but the rock's structure had not become more clotted like a thrombolite. It was still layered.

The researchers concluded that active foraminifera can reshape the fabric of stromatolites and could have instigated the loss of those formations and the appearance of thrombolites.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_environment/~3/JlG8Y15h1UI/130528143756.htm

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Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Bell launches Canada's first wireless TV receiver

Exclusive Fibe TV technology frees your HD television experience from cable

MONTR?AL, May 27, 2013 /CNW Telbec/ - Bell today announced the launch of the new Fibe TV Wireless Receiver, a Bell exclusive that enables customers to enjoy the Fibe experience on up to 5 additional TVs anywhere in the home - without the hassle of running cable through the house.

"The new Fibe TV Wireless Receiver is part of Bell's commitment to bring consumers the very best TV viewing experience. Our scale means Bell can access the leading next-generation communications technologies, and that means Canadians will enjoy the best the world has to offer - right here at home," said Wade Oosterman, President of Bell Mobility and Residential Services, and Bell's Chief Brand Officer. "Fibe TV is growing fast thanks to its superior broadband network and features, and the Wireless Receiver takes Fibe even further. Canada's best TV service just got better."

A Wireless Receiver Transmitter connects to a customer's Home Networking modem and works with their main Whole Home PVR to connect 1 or more compact Wireless Receivers to deliver the full Fibe TV experience to as many as 5 additional TVs around the home. Fibe TV Wireless Receivers are available to new and existing Fibe TV clients for rental ($7 per month) or purchase ($199), and include the new award-winning Fibe Remote.

"Going wireless means you can watch HD TV anywhere you want in your home -- without the hassle of running more cable across floors or through the walls of your house. All you need is a power outlet," said Shawn Omstead, Vice President of Products for Bell Residential Services. "Wireless TV is just another example of what Fibe can do that cable can't."

Please visit Bell.ca/WirelessTV to learn more, or visit a Bell store or The Source location to order your Fibe TV Wireless Receiver. To confirm Fibe TV is available for your home, please visit Bell.ca/FibeTV.

The best TV service out there
Fibe TV is the next generation of television, bringing innovative new choices to consumers and a competitive challenge to the established cable TV companies. Bell does what cable can't, with a range of advanced features including:

  • Apps right on your TV including Facebook, Twitter, TSN Xtra and more
  • The most HD On Demand content (with exclusive reviews and recos from Rotten Tomatoes) and the largest HD recording capacity (up to 100 hours)
  • The best on-screen guide available, with picture-in-picture and extensive search options
  • The ability to set, play back and manage recordings on up to 6 TVs, pause and rewind live TV on every TV, and record 4 shows at once with just one PVR.

Fast-growing Fibe TV
Fibe TV is now available across Montr?al, Qu?bec City and Toronto, with multiple new locations being added in 2013, including Aurora, Barrie, Hamilton, Markham, Milton, Newmarket, Ottawa, Richmond Hill, Stoney Creek and Vaughan in Ontario, and Laval and South Shore and North Shore Montr?al in Qu?bec. Available to more than 3.3 million households now, Fibe TV will be accessible to a million more by the end of the year.

Fibe TV gained 47,463 new customers in the first quarter of 2013, a 41.9% increase over 2012 and more net new subscribers in Q1 than any other TV service - in fact, Bell's major cable competitors had a net loss of customers in the same time frame. Bell now has at least 295,761 Fibe TV subscribers, 147% more than at the end of Q1 last year.

About Bell
Bell is Canada's largest communications company, providing consumers and business customers with leading TV, Internet, wireless, home phone and business communications solutions. Bell Media is Canada's premier multimedia company with leading assets in television, radio and digital media. Bell is wholly owned by Montr?al's BCE Inc. (TSX, NYSE: BCE). For more information, please visit Bell.ca.

The Bell Let's Talk mental health initiative is a national charitable program that promotes Canadian mental health across Canada with the Bell Let'/s Talk Day anti-stigma campaign and support for community care, research and workplace best practices. To learn more, please visit Bell.ca/LetsTalk.

SOURCE Bell Canada

Image with caption: "Bell today announced the exclusive, first in Canada launch of the new Fibe TV Wireless TV Receiver. (CNW Group/Bell Canada)". Image available at: http://photos.newswire.ca/images/download/20130527_C2415_PHOTO_EN_27093.jpg

Image with caption: "Bell today announced the exclusive, first in Canada launch of the new Fibe TV Wireless TV Receiver (CNW Group/Bell Canada)". Image available at: http://photos.newswire.ca/images/download/20130527_C2415_PHOTO_EN_27092.jpg

Image with caption: " A Wireless Receiver Transmitter connects up to 5 new Fibe TV Wireless TV Receivers around the home (CNW Group/Bell Canada)". Image available at: http://photos.newswire.ca/images/download/20130527_C2415_PHOTO_EN_27095.jpg

Image with caption: "A Wireless Receiver Transmitter connects up to 5 new Fibe TV Wireless TV Receivers around the home. (CNW Group/Bell Canada)". Image available at: http://photos.newswire.ca/images/download/20130527_C2415_PHOTO_EN_27094.jpg

Source: http://tmworld.com/electronics-products/electronic-product-releases/electro-mechanical/4415123/Bell-launches-Canada-s-first-wireless-TV-receiver

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Staines - Business over Breakfast, The Thames Club, Middlesex

As you can see from the list of vacancies, here at the BoB Club in Staines, we are always looking for business people who are keen to network in the Staines area.

For those of you who may have tried networking before and felt under pressure to refer each week, try BoB Networking as we concentrate on quality referrals rather than quantity at our meetings.

So come along and try our lively group and learn more about how Networking through BoB clubs can help both you and your business

At Business over Breakfast (BoB Clubs) we support businesses throughout the South East with focused business networking meetings. We help generate business for our members through professional and structured business breakfast meetings, focusing on building strong relationships and word of mouth referral marketing.

We meet fortnightly between 06.30am and 09:00am and our relaxed meetings include open networking, member showcase presentation and an opportunity for you to present your own business. We train and guide you to become an effective networker irrespective at what level you are at. We encourage you to be yourself and make efficient and effective use of the business opportunity.

Event Organised By

Business over Breakfast (BoB Clubs)

www.bobclubs.com

At Business over Breakfast (BoB Clubs) we support businesses throughout the South East with focused business networking meetings. We help generate business for our members through professional and structured business breakfast meetings, focusing on building strong relationships and word of mouth referral marketing.

We meet fortnightly between 06:45am and 08:30am and our relaxed meetings include open networking, member showcase presentation and an opportunity for you to present your own business. We train and guide you to become an effective networker irrespective at what level you are at. We encourage you to be yourself and make efficient and effective use of the business opportunity.

Please contact Ian 07702 783233 to reserve your place at one of our meetings.

Attending this event or want to share it on Facebook? Comment below!

Source: http://www.findnetworkingevents.com/events/index.cfm?action=eventdetail&eventid=59215&utm_source=sitefeeds&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=regionfeed

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Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Computers and Technology: The Case for Moving to the Cloud

Recent developments in technology, including the proliferation of the internet and of web-based applications, have made a compelling business case for many organizations to seriously consider moving their IT operations from in-house servers to the cloud, and to use web-based applications. Benefits include both lower capital costs and on-going operating costs, and no hardware and software installation and maintenance to worry about. In this article we will use the terms "cloud" and "web" interchangeably.

Until about 2008, there were relatively few cloud storage providers and a limited number of web applications. However in recent years the cloud computing industry has exploded, with almost every conceivable application now being offered as a cloud service. Most business technology needs can now be met from today's cloud-based offerings.

Where do I start?

In evaluating your organization's opportunity to move to the cloud, there are three distinct service areas to consider: email (including calendar & contacts), file storage and software applications.

Email

Web-based email has the same functionality as PC-based email, but without the high cost and headaches of maintaining an in-house email system. The two leading web-based email providers are Google and Microsoft. Both these providers support mobile devices such as Blackberry, iPhone, Android and Windows Phone. Google's mail, calendar and contacts also interface with Outlook running on PC's. Google Apps for Business is priced at $50 per user per year. Microsoft Office 365 is priced at $150 per user per year, however it also includes web-based access to the latest versions of Word, Excel and PowerPoint.

File Storage

When choosing a cloud file storage service, there are a number of factors to consider such as level of file encryption, the ease of viewing, editing and saving files, ability to assign read/write permissions to folders or files, desktop and application access, and password protection. You may want to choose a service that automatically syncs your data to a local NAS (Network Access Storage) device, so that if you lose access to the cloud service, you still have the ability to access your data locally. Some of the leading cloud storage providers are Egnyte, iCloud and OpenDrive.

Applications

There are now cloud applications available to meet almost every business need. For example, standard office applications to create documents, spreadsheets, presentations and forms are now available online from both Google and Microsoft. If you are running a local server-based CRM, there are now many web-based CRM's to consider, including Solve360, Salesforce, Sugar and NetSuite. For an excellent, very easy to use web-based time and billing application, try Freshbooks.

What are the risks of moving to the cloud?

Moving to the cloud is not risk-free. However it is important to realize that maintaining all IT operations in-house certainly has its own set of risks, along with significant costs. The following are some of the risks to be aware of, and suggestions to help mitigate these risks:

Data availability. What if you lose internet connectivity, or your cloud service provider goes off line? We suggest maintaining a local copy of your files on a NAS device which is automatically sync'd to the cloud, providing you with access to your data until connectivity is restored.

Data privacy and security. The cloud provider must be in compliance with data privacy and security rules and regulations that apply to your organization, such as PCI-DSS and PIPEDA. Access permissions should ensure that only the right users have access to the right files. Transmission security that employs 256-bit AES encryption ensures that even if company data were intercepted, it would be impossible to decipher.

Data retention. Files must be stored in compliance with your data retention policies, for example to ensure availability of historical financial information for tax authorities.

Disaster recovery. Your cloud provider must have documented and tested disaster recovery capabilities.

An accelerating trend

The shift to the cloud is happening at an accelerating rate, as organizations recognize the potential opportunity to reap cost savings by dramatically reducing their IT expenditures. Competition amongst cloud service providers is intense as they compete for a share of this rapidly expanding market, resulting in greater choice and more competitive pricing for businesses seeking cloud services.

The case for moving to the cloud is often a compelling one, and should not be ignored. If your organization maintains an in-house IT infrastructure and support, then it may be worthwhile evaluating the feasibility of cloud computing.

Source: http://collapsist.blogspot.com/2013/05/the-case-for-moving-to-cloud.html

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Katies Cards Announces a Collaboration with Eco-Friendly Wedding Supplier Shropshire Petals

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May 28, 2013 -- Katies Cards Announces a Collaboration with Eco-Friendly Wedding Supplier Shropshire Petals

(PRWEB) May 28, 2013

Katies Cards has recently announced that it will be collaborating with Shropshire Petals, an eco-friendly flower company which produces 100% biodegradable petal confetti. Following on from the success of the companys joint promotion with Dotty Vintage Weddings earlier in the year, the Katies Cards marketing team has been keen to reach out to more companies who share their eco-friendly ethos and their dedication to providing a personalized and professional service to customers. Shropshire Petals does just that and the companies have agreed to include each other in future blog posts, their June newsletters and to promote each other via their social media networks.

There are multiple benefits to such collaborations, not only for the businesses themselves but also for each companys customers. Customers of both companies are likely to be looking for similar qualities in their suppliers and, in this case, to share the desire of making their wedding day as eco-friendly as possible.

One of the main reasons that Katies Cards has chosen to collaborate with Shropshire Petals is that the online card company is hoping to expand the service that it offers for weddings. For brides and grooms-to-be, Katies Cards offers a selection of vintage-inspired save the date wedding ecards. The low cost of a Katies Cards membership means that sending electronic save the date cards is extremely cost-effective, particularly for those who are inviting a large number of guests. Furthermore, people are increasingly managing their social diaries via their mobile phones, tablets and computers. Therefore, receiving their save the date card online allows people to instantly add the date to their calendar and also prevents wedding invitations getting lost in the post or mislaid.


Katies Cards recent focus on expanding the service it offers for weddings is indicative of the growing eco-friendly wedding trend.

As Katies Cards CEO, Katie Davies, explains:

The wedding industry is seeing a growth in the number of people who are planning their wedding with an ethical conscience. Due to our eco-friendly ethos here at Katies Cards, we want to provide an effective service for those brides and grooms who share our concern for the environment. By building connections with similar companies, we can not only increase our reputation as an eco-friendly supplier but can also help other small businesses gain valuable exposure for their websites.

It is not only eco-friendly wedding suppliers that the company hopes to build links with, it also hopes to make connections with companies that provide an environmentally friendly service for parties and other events. Additionally, these joint collaborations are a smart way of connecting digitally with other companies and the links that are created play a key role in search engine optimization. Linking with similar businesses also helps to create a coherent brand image and its important, therefore, for small business such as Katies Cards to be selective when choosing which companies they link to.

This dedication to providing an eco-friendly service for weddings is part of Katie's Cards' wider 'green scheme'. All the ecards available on the companys website are environmentally-friendly: they do not have to travel by land, air or sea to be delivered and no resources are used to make the cards. Interestingly, the eco-friendly nature of the service offered by Katie's Cards has meant that many businesses have shown an interest in using the company's ecards as part of their online marketing strategy. Katie's Cards' CEO is confident, therefore, that the green nature of their ecards will continue to increase their desirability both within the wedding industry and beyond.

Read the full story at http://www.prweb.com/releases/2013/5/prweb10767966.htm.

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Source:PRWEB.COM Newswire. All Rights Reserved

Source: http://www.consumerelectronicsnet.com/articles/viewarticle.jsp?id=2621982

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Coinbase Leads Charge In Bitcoin's Consumerization

Screen Shot 2013-05-27 at 3.56.26 PMBecause why do anything other than try out hot technologies on Memorial Day, I just bought some Bitcoin. I might finally play Dots and maybe 3D-print an ear later this afternoon. I would not have bought my .1 ($13.17) in Bitcoin if it weren't for a startup called Coinbase, which is "one of the places that looked less sketchy" according to TechCrunch editor and Bitcoin bug John Biggs. "It's one of the ones I would tell my Mom to use," Biggs insisted. Indeed, if your mom knows how to link a bank account to a Fidelity or Charles Schwab account and buy mutual funds, buying Bitcoin through Coinbase is a similar deal. Just input her account and routing number, verify a couple of small transactions and your mom will be one step closer to Silk Road.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/pOIZjYoYf5A/

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Ethiopian leader accuses international court of racial bias

ADDIS ABABA (Reuters) - Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn, the current chairman of the African Union, on Monday accused the International Criminal Court of racial bias and targeting Africans for prosecution,

The Hague-based court was set up to bring the perpetrators of genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity to justice - a mission that Hailemariam said it has lost sight of.

"The intention was to avoid any kind of impunity but now the process has degenerated into some kind of race-hunting," Hailemariam told reporters at the end of African Union summit in Addis Ababa. "So we object to that."

During the summit, African leaders backed a Kenyan proposal for the tribunal to refer its cases against President Uhuru Kenyatta and his deputy for alleged crimes against humanity back to Kenya.

Kenyatta and William Ruto are accused of masterminding ethnic violence that killed more than 1,200 people after a disputed presidential election five years ago. Both deny the charges.

A new constitution ratified after the turmoil and a reformed judiciary meant Kenya could deal with the matter itself, African Union officials said.

A senior AU official said the ICC and the U.N. Security Council needed to be more responsive to decisions taken by Africa.

"It is not a court of the north to try leaders from the south," Ramtane Lamamra, the AU's peace and security head, told a news conference.

It was unreasonable for the United Nations to refer Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir to the ICC when three of the Security Council's five permanent members - the United States, Russia and China - had either not signed up to or not ratified the Rome Statute which established the ICC, he said.

"How could you refer the cases of others while you don't feel compelled to abide by the same rule," Lamamra said.

(Reporting by Richard Lough and Aaaron Maasho; Editing by George Obulutsa and Angus MacSwan)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ethiopian-leader-accuses-international-court-racial-bias-164556886.html

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Monday, May 27, 2013

Rogers eligible to make debut for LA Galaxy

FILE - In this Saturday, Aug. 8, 2009 file photo, Columbus Crew's Robbie Rogers celebrates after scoring against the San Jose Earthquakes during the second half of an MLS soccer match in San Francisco. Rogers is joining the Los Angeles Galaxy of Major League Soccer in another step by gay athletes. Rogers tells The Associated Press his fears about returning to soccer were eased by the support he received from family, fans and players, including Galaxy star Landon Donovan. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez, File)

FILE - In this Saturday, Aug. 8, 2009 file photo, Columbus Crew's Robbie Rogers celebrates after scoring against the San Jose Earthquakes during the second half of an MLS soccer match in San Francisco. Rogers is joining the Los Angeles Galaxy of Major League Soccer in another step by gay athletes. Rogers tells The Associated Press his fears about returning to soccer were eased by the support he received from family, fans and players, including Galaxy star Landon Donovan. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez, File)

(AP) ? Robbie Rogers is eligible to make his debut for the Los Angeles Galaxy after Major League Soccer said it had received his international transfer certificate.

The former U.S. national team winger will become the first active openly gay male athlete to compete in a North American professional team sport when he makes his debut for the Galaxy, which could come in Sunday night's game against Seattle.

Rogers signed with the Galaxy on Saturday after being acquired from the Chicago Fire. The Galaxy traded Mike Magee to his hometown Fire in exchange for the rights to Rogers, who will wear No. 14.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-05-26-SOC-MLS-Galaxy-Rogers/id-362552300f344673a53b57f58c98ea11

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Rockets hit south Beirut after Hezbollah vows Syria victory

By Dominic Evans

BEIRUT (Reuters) - Two rockets hit a Shi'ite Muslim district of southern Beirut on Sunday and wounded several people, residents said, a day after the leader of Lebanese Shi'ite militant movement Hezbollah said his group would continue fighting in Syria until victory.

It was the first attack to apparently target Hezbollah's stronghold in the south of the Lebanese capital since the outbreak of the two-year conflict in neighboring Syria, which has sharply heightened Lebanon's own sectarian tensions.

One of the rockets landed in a car sales yard next to a busy road junction in the Chiah neighborhood and the other hit an apartment several hundred meters away, wounding five people, residents said.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility and the army said it was investigating who was behind the attack.

A Lebanese security source said three rocket launchers were found, one of which had failed to launch, in the hills to the southeast of the Lebanese capital, about 5 miles from the area where the two rockets landed.

The rocket strikes came hours after Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, a powerful supporter of President Bashar al-Assad in neighboring Syria's civil war, said his fighters were committed to the conflict whatever the costs.

"We will continue to the end of the road. We accept this responsibility and will accept all sacrifices and expected consequences of this position," he said in a televised speech on Saturday evening. "We will be the ones who bring victory".

Syria's two-year uprising has polarized Lebanon, with Sunni Muslims supporting the rebellion against Assad and Shi'ite Hezbollah and its allies standing by Assad.

Until recently, Nasrallah insisted that Hezbollah had not sent guerrillas to fight alongside Assad's forces, but in his speech on Saturday he said it had been fighting in Syria for several months to defend Lebanon from radical Islamist groups he said were now driving Syria's rebellion.

QUSAIR OFFENSIVE

Hezbollah forces and Assad's troops launched a fierce assault last week aimed at driving Syrian rebels out of Qusair, a strategic town close to the Lebanese border which rebels have used as a supply route for weapons coming into the country.

Nasrallah's speech was condemned by Sunni Muslim former Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri who said that Hezbollah, set up by Iran in the 1980s to fight Israeli occupation forces in south Lebanon, had abandoned anti-Israeli "resistance" in favor of sectarian conflict in Syria.

"The resistance is ending by your hand and your will," Hariri said in a statement. "The resistance announced its political and military suicide in Qusair".

Hariri is backed by Saudi Arabia, which along with other Sunni Muslim Gulf Arab monarchies has strongly supported the uprising against Iranian-backed Assad, whose minority Alawite sect is an offshoot of Shi'ite Islam.

Lebanon, haunted by its own 1975-1990 civil war and torn by the same sectarian rifts as its powerful neighbor, has sought to pursue a police of "dissociation" from the Syrian turmoil.

But it is struggling to deal with nearly half a million refugees who have fled the fighting in Syria and its northern city of Tripoli has seen frequent explosions of violence between Sunni Muslims and the small Alawite community.

At least 25 people have been killed in Tripoli over the last week in street fighting which has coincided with the battle for Qusair across the border.

(Additional reporting by Laila Bassam and Erika Solomon; Editing by Tom Pfeiffer)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/two-rockets-hit-hezbollah-held-district-beirut-residents-045444191.html

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GOP dilemma: draw new voters without irking base

WASHINGTON (AP) ? The Republican Party, having lost the popular vote in five of the last six presidential elections, confronts a dilemma that's easier to describe than to solve: How can it broaden its appeal to up-for-grabs voters without alienating its conservative base?

There's no consensus yet on how to do it. With the next election three years away, Republicans are tiptoeing around policy changes even as they size up potential candidates who range from tea party heroes to pragmatic governors in Republican- and Democratic-leaning states.

There's a partial road map, but it's more than two decades old, and the other party drafted it. Democrats, sick of losing elections and being tagged as out-of-touch liberals, moved their party toward the center and rallied behind Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton in 1992.

Strategists in both parties say Clinton's achievement, however impressive, may look modest compared to what a Republican leader must do to construct a new winning formula, given the nation's changing demographics.

"Our challenge was to get voters back," said Al From, a chief architect of Clinton's political rise. "Their challenge is harder: get voters to come into a new coalition."

That will be complicated, From said, because the Republicans' conservative base "is more demanding and more important" than the Democrats' liberal base.

An array of Republican campaign veterans agree. They say the party's loyal base of conservative activists ? including evangelical Christians, anti-tax crusaders and anti-abortion advocates ? is too big, ideological and vital to be treated with anything but great care and respect. Republicans will go nowhere if they lose a hard-core conservative every time they pick up a new unaligned voter with a more moderate message.

While they circle that conundrum, Republican leaders hope for a charismatic nominee in the mold of Clinton or Ronald Reagan. They yearn for someone who can appeal to less ideological voters without prompting conservatives to feel their principles are losing primacy.

Several veteran strategists say Republicans should focus less on modifying their ideas than on improving their campaign mechanics and finding nominees with broader personal appeal than Mitt Romney, John McCain and Bob Dole.

"The foundation of the party as a conservative party hasn't been the principal liability, but the principal asset," said GOP campaign strategist Terry Holt.

"Among every voter group there are people who share our values," Holt said. The key to winning, he said, is to perform better at "micro-targeting" and other techniques designed to find and motivate potential voters.

In that area, he said, "the other party is about half a light year ahead of us."

Arizona-based Republican consultant Eddie Mahe said finding a charismatic candidate is more important than tweaking policies. Given Americans' low opinion of politics, he said, "to sell the party as a party is nonsensical."

Instead, Mahe said, Republicans must pick a nominee who appeals "to the non-voters, disinterested voters, the uninformed ? whatever you want to call them ? who are attracted to a personality, someone they feel good about."

The Republican who comes closest to that description, he said, is Rep. Michele Bachmann of Minnesota, a tea party favorite. But Mahe said he doubts she could win a general election.

Dan Schnur, a former aide to President George W. Bush who teaches political science at the University of Southern California, said: "Parties don't remake parties. Leaders remake parties."

Schnur agrees that Clinton was a gifted politician, but he also had some help and luck, which Republicans will need, too.

Clinton has acknowledged that Gary Hart began tugging the Democratic Party from its liberal and outdated moorings in 1984 and 1988, even if he eventually fell short of the nominations. And a 1992 candidacy by New York governor and liberal hero Mario Cuomo might have doomed Clinton's lean-to-the-center strategy.

Republicans "need a Gary Hart before they get a Bill Clinton," Schnur said. And they may have trouble narrowing the ideological field in the 2016 primary and beyond, which could force the eventual nominee to embrace hard-right principles that excite GOP activists but turn off independent voters.

A 97-page post-mortem, commissioned by the Republican Party after Romney's loss last fall, said the GOP "is increasingly marginalizing itself, and unless changes are made, it will be increasingly difficult for Republicans to win another presidential election in the near future."

The report emphasized messaging and outreach more than possible changes to policies and proposals. "The party should be proud of its conservative principles," the report said, but it also must be more "welcoming and inclusive" to young voters, minorities and women.

From ? who founded the Democratic Leadership Council, a key proponent of Clinton's 1992 agenda ? says Republicans are on the wrong track. They must be more open to adjusting their policies, he said, if they want to win presidential elections.

In the early 1990s, From said, "people didn't trust Democrats on the economy, national security, crime, welfare." By pushing welfare reductions, community policing and other new ideas, he said, "we tried to systematically eliminate the obstacles. Republicans have got to do the same thing."

Clinton's 1992 team believed "if you get the argument right, people will vote for us," From said. "Republicans don't have the argument right."

Clinton campaign aide Paul Begala said parties that win presidential elections are "always more mainstream and more unified. Right now, the Republicans are neither."

Begala said liberal activists made only modest complaints about Clinton's shift toward the political center because they were sick of losing elections with nominees such as George McGovern, Walter Mondale and Michael Dukakis.

He said Republicans might need one more presidential loss to create a similar level of frustration, which can open the way to pragmatism and moderation. Nominating a tea party-leaning "true believer" such as Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas could do the trick, Begala said.

Holt, who has advised numerous GOP campaigns, said Republicans have already learned the lesson. "The most effective remedy for any party is an overdose of defeat," he said. "We've suffered that."

The Republicans' challenge is spelled out in exit polls from President Barack Obama's win over Romney. Nearly two-thirds of Republican voters labeled themselves as conservatives. But fewer than half of all Democratic voters called themselves liberals.

That indicates Democrats are working with a less ideological, more flexible base, giving a nominee leeway to embrace issues that might attract non-aligned voters in the general election.

Republicans, on the other hand, depend on a more ideological base. That's one reason party leaders ? for now, anyway ? talk less of modifying party policies and more of changing mechanics, technology and messaging.

"The brand has suffered," Holt said, "but the values have been very consistent."

___

Associated Press polling director Jennifer Agiesta contributed to this report.

Follow Charles Babington on Twitter: https://twitter.com/cbabington.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/gop-dilemma-draw-voters-without-irking-071512481.html

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Sunday, May 26, 2013

Christie wants to talk with Rutgers about latest scandal twist

NEWARK, N.J. (AP) -- New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie plans to speak with Rutgers officials about a report that the athletic director hired to clean up the school's scandal-scarred program quit as Tennessee's women's volleyball coach 16 years ago after her players complained she ruled through humiliation, fear and emotional abuse.

Christie spokesman Michael Drewniak says the governor is aware of the report about Julie Hermann in the Star-Ledger of Newark, but wants to get more details before commenting.

''He's not going to make any judgments at this time,'' Drewniak said in an email to The Associated Press on Sunday.

The Star-Ledger reported that Tennessee players wrote the mentality cruelty they suffered when Hermann was coach was unbearable, adding she called them ''whores, alcoholics and learning disabled.''

Hermann was hired on May15 to replace the ousted Tim Pernetti, who was let go after basketball coach Mike Rice was fired for abusive behavior.

The 49-year-old Hermann is scheduled to take over at Rutgers on June 17. She is set to become the first woman to run the Scarlet Knights' athletic program and one of three female ADs at the 124 schools playing at college football's top tier.

However, it's uncertain whether the report will force Rutgers to re-consider the appointment. It also could give impetus to those who want new university president Robert Barchi to step down after yet another black eye for the state's largest university.

The university had not issued a comment by 4 p.m. Sunday.

Hermann was not immediately available for comment, but told the Star-Ledger that she did not recall the Tennessee letter. The newspaper said when it was read to her by phone, she replied, ''Wow.''

Rutgers board members Candace Straight and Joseph J. Roberts Jr. did not return telephone calls by the AP seeking comment.

''The questionable decision-making at this program so heavily funded by taxpayers continues to astound me,'' Assembly speaker Sheila Oliver said in an email to the AP.

Louisville Athletic Director Tom Jurich, who was Hermann's boss for almost the last 16 years, was surprised by the report.

''For me to say this is a shock, it totally is because of the tremendous job she did for me,'' Jurich said Sunday in a telephone interview. ''When she was with me at Northern Arizona, her players adored and loved her. I never heard anything about this at all from the Tennessee players and a lot of them have come through Louisville a number of times. Everybody is always singing her praises.''

The Star-Ledger report said that wasn't the case late in her coaching career at Tennessee.

In the letter submitted by all 15 team members in 1996, the volleyball players said Hermann called them ''whores, alcoholics and learning disabled'' and they wrote: ''It has been unanimously decided that this is an irreconcilable issue.'' The players told The Star-Ledger that Hermann absorbed the words and said: ''I choose not to coach you guys.''

After a series of interviews with many of the former Tennessee players about Hermann, The Star-Ledger said:

''Their accounts depict a coach who thought nothing of demeaning them, who would ridicule and laugh at them over their weight and their performances, sometimes forcing players to do 100 sideline push-ups during games, who punished them after losses by making them wear their workout clothes inside out in public or not allowing them to shower or eat, and who pitted them against one another, cutting down particular players with the whole team watching, and through gossip.

''Several women said playing for Hermann had driven them into depression and counseling, and that her conduct had sullied the experience of playing Division I volleyball.''

The Star-Ledger asked Hermann about the players' lingering grievances.

''I never heard any of this, never name-calling them or anything like that whatsoever,'' she told the newspaper. ''None of this is familiar to me.''

Hermann had promised a restart the Rutgers' athletic program following the ouster of its men's basketball coach and the resignation of other officials.

''No one on the coaching staff doesn't believe that we need to be an open book, that we will no longer have any practice, anywhere at any time, that anybody couldn't walk into and be pleased about what's going on in that environment. It is a new day. It is already fixed,'' Hermann said at her introductory news conference.

At that news conference, Hermann was questioned about a 1997 jury verdict that awarded $150,000 to a former Tennessee assistant coach who said Hermann fired her because she became pregnant.

Rutgers' problems started in December when Rice was suspended three games and fined $75,000 by the school after a video of his conduct at practices was given to Pernetti by Eric Murdock, a former assistant coach. The video showed numerous clips of Rice firing basketballs at players, hitting them in the back, legs, feet and shoulders. It also showed him grabbing players by their jerseys and yanking them around the court. Rice can also be heard yelling obscenities and using anti-gay slurs.

The controversy went public in April when ESPN aired the videos and Barchi admitted he didn't view the video in the fall. Rice was fired and Pernetti, assistant coach Jimmy Martelli and interim senior vice president and university counsel John Wolf resigned.

Even when Rutgers has made a move that was well received, there was a glitch.

After hiring former Scarlet Knights star Eddie Jordan to take over the basketball program, the university made the mistake of calling him a graduate when he had never finished work for his degree.

Now the Hermann problem has popped up when many thought the worst was over, and that the athletic department could start focusing on its move to the Big Ten in 2014.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/christie-wants-talk-rutgers-hermann-182320794--spt.html

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Netflix looks to hook subscribers with 'Arrested'

This undated publicity photo released by Netflix shows David Cross, left, and Portia de Rossi in a scene from "Arrested Development," premiering May 26, 2013 on Netflix. The sitcom, also starring Jason Bateman and Will Arnett, was canceled by Fox in 2006 after three seasons. (AP Photo/Netflix, Sam Urdank)

This undated publicity photo released by Netflix shows David Cross, left, and Portia de Rossi in a scene from "Arrested Development," premiering May 26, 2013 on Netflix. The sitcom, also starring Jason Bateman and Will Arnett, was canceled by Fox in 2006 after three seasons. (AP Photo/Netflix, Sam Urdank)

(AP) ? Netflix is hoping this weekend's release of the resurrected TV series "Arrested Development" will draw more subscribers to its Internet video service.

The award-winning show about the dysfunctional Bluth family returns Sunday, seven years after Fox cancelled the series. The revival coincides with Netflix's own resounding comeback from a customer backlash over price increases and shareholders' worries about rising expenses. The adversity had raised doubts about the company's management and future.

Now, Netflix is winning back subscribers and investors with a bold attempt to establish its $8-per-month service as a home entertainment powerhouse that rivals the broadcast television networks and premium cable channels such as HBO.

"Arrested Development," a comedy that won six Emmy awards during a critically acclaimed three-year run, is the third exclusive series from Netflix Inc. this year. It's part of Netflix's effort to add more original programming to a selection that consists primarily of old TV series and movies.

With 29.2 million U.S. subscribers ? far more than the 21.9 million TV subscribers that leading cable provider Comcast Corp. has ? Netflix has already reshaped home entertainment.

The service is encouraging more people to forego cable and satellite TV service and rely on Netflix to watch popular TV series a year or more after they originally were shown. Netflix also is empowering viewers to watch an entire season of a TV series in a matter of days instead of months.

Netflix CEO Reed Hastings isn't done disrupting things yet. He is spending more than $2 billion annually, including about $200 million to finance original programming that can be watched on traditional computers, smartphones, tablets, video game consoles and Internet-connected TVs.

By expanding its library of content, Netflix is hoping people will decide to spend their idle time on its Internet video service rather than play video games, fraternize on Facebook, surf cable or satellite TV or watch a DVD. (Netflix started out as a DVD-by-mail rental service, but it is phasing that out in favor of Internet streaming.)

"We want our members to choose Netflix in these moments of truth," Hastings wrote in a recent essay outlining Netflix's philosophy.

By bringing back "Arrested Development" this weekend, Netflix is also trying to prove that people still want to see quality entertainment even when the weather is getting nicer and the days are growing longer. That runs counter to the philosophy of broadcast TV networks, which for decades have typically started the new seasons of their top TV series in September and stopped showing new episodes just before Memorial Day weekend.

BTIG Research analyst Rich Greenfield believes the scarcity of compelling choices on broadcast TV at this time of year is bound to help Netflix draw more viewers to "Arrested Development." In a recent analysis posted on BTIG's blog, Greenfield predicted that the total number of hours watched on Netflix in June might even surpass the Fox broadcast network for the first time.

If that were to happen, it would be an ironic twist, given that Fox canceled "Arrested Development" in 2006 over the protest of the series' fervent fans. "Arrested Development" had low ratings during its run, but the viewers who did watch loved it. Others discovered the show later on DVD or Internet streaming ? both of which have been available through Netflix.

The first three seasons of "Arrested Development" were being watched by so many subscribers that Netflix knew another season would be well-received by its existing audience and would likely lure new subscribers, too.

Like Netflix's previous series, all 15 new episodes of "Arrested Development" will be released simultaneously to allow viewers to watch the show as if they were perusing a book and deciding how many chapters to pore through in a single sitting. "Arrested Development" is scheduled to be available at 12:01 a.m. PDT Sunday (3:01 a.m. EDT), meaning Netflix subscribers could conceivably devour the entire season before grilling on Memorial Day afternoon.

Netflix's departure from TV's traditional one-episode-per-week strategy has been well received by subscribers who have watched the service's previous forays into original programming.

February's release of "House of Cards," a political drama that stars Oscar-winning actor Kevin Spacey, helped Netflix add 2 million more U.S. subscribers during the first three months of the year, more than analysts anticipated. "Hemlock Grove," a quirky horror series, attracted additional viewers during the first weekend after its mid-April release, according to Netflix, although the company hasn't provided specific numbers.

It's difficult to quantify how many subscribers joined Netflix to watch "House of Cards" and then decided to stick with the service after seeing all the other material available. That's because "House of Cards" debuted during a winter period that is traditionally one of the service's prime times. For instance, Netflix added 1.74 million subscribers in the first three months of 2012. The difference between the two years could be an indication that "House of Cards" generated an additional 250,000 subscribers, although there is no way of knowing for sure.

In any case, "Arrested Development" is expected to attract even more new subscribers than "House of Cards" because of its built-in fan base and the success that several of its cast members have enjoyed since the show's cancellation. The original cast, including Jason Bateman, Michael Cera and Will Arnett, is returning to the zany series revolving around a family whose opulent lifestyle was torn apart by the arrest of a corrupt patriarch played by Jeffrey Tambor.

In the new episodes, viewers will get updates on the characters, one by one. Although that was done because of difficulties booking the actors all at once, it ended up allowing for a non-traditional viewing experience, one more fitting on Netflix than a traditional network. Viewers, for instance, will be able to pause an episode on one character to watch the same scene from another character's vantage point.

The long-awaited return of "Arrested Development" prompted Netflix to be more optimistic about subscriber growth during the traditionally sluggish April-to-June period, Hastings told The Associated Press in a recent interview. The Los Gatos, Calif., company predicted that it could gain as many 880,000 U.S. Internet streaming subscribers during the second quarter. Without the series, Hastings said, the projected increase probably wouldn't have exceeded 530,000, the growth it had during the same period a year ago.

If "Arrested Development" does as well as Hastings hopes, it will mark another triumph for a company that had fallen out of favor with subscribers and investors less than two years ago. Netflix infuriated customers in July 2011 when it announced price increases of as much as 60 percent for people who wanted to rent DVDs by mail and stream Internet video. Then, Hastings unleashed even more outrage by outlining plans to spin off the DVD-by-mail option into a separate service called Qwikster ? an idea that seemed so absurd that it was mocked on "Saturday Night Live."

Netflix didn't waver on its new pricing system, even though it resulted in the loss of 800,000 customers at the time. But Hastings scrapped the Qwikster concept amid the backlash. The DVD-by-mail service, which has lost 6 million customers in the past 18 months and now has 8 million, is being allowed to slowly fade away.

While Netflix subscribers were howling, shareholders were dumping their stock. Investors feared the company wouldn't be able to attract enough subscribers to cover the steadily rising fees for licensing video rights.

Those worries have dissipated now that Netflix is growing rapidly again, something that Hastings had promised would eventually happen after apologizing for the Qwikster mistake and the way he handled the price increase.

After hitting a high of nearly $305 in July 2011 and then falling to below $53 last August, Netflix's stock is trading at nearly $230.

"I don't have a sense of 'I told you so,' or something," Hastings told the AP last month. "I have a sense of satisfaction that we are doing what we do best, which is steadily improving our service."

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Online

http://www.netflix.com/ArrestedDevelopment

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-05-24-Netflix-Arrested%20Development/id-9a4bb17cb2ac411f9e7269c2282fc46a

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