Friday, July 26, 2013

Apple E book Price fixing

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Milt Priggee is a freelance editorial cartoonist from northwest Washington State. His work has been reprinted in Time, Newsweek, U.S. News & World report, The New York Times, Washington Post and USA Today.

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Source: http://www.cagle.com/2013/07/apple-e-book-price-fixing/

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Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Windows Phone 8S by HTC, Microsoft Surface make appearance in alluring surfing competition promo

Surfing apparel company Roxy put together a semi-risqu? teaser promoting the Roxy Pro Biarritz 2013 surfing championship in France. The event is taking place July 10th through the 14th.

As part of the promotion, Roxy was teasing a ?who am I, just guess? highlight where we are presented with an athlete?s well formed physique, but no face to make you wonder who you are watching get ready to hit the waves.

#WhoAmIJustGuess was trending on Twitter for everyone to offer their impressions of the ad as well as guess who the lovely lady was. Today, Roxy formally announced that the mystery lady in view was five time champion, Stephanie Gilmore from New South Wales, Australia.

What does all this have to do with mobile gadgets? Well as it happens, Microsoft is a sponsor so we see Stephanie start her day with a Windows Phone 8S by HTC and respond to an email on her Microsoft Surface tablet (odd that her email is a Gmail account for the ad though). Then it?s back to the Windows Phone to get the tunes pumping to be ready for the water.

So, if you were not aware of the surfing event this week, now you are and here we see yet another example of Microsoft creeping a bit of its brand in as many places as possible. In this case, Roxy seems to be taking some heat for objectifying a surfette like that, but we bet a whole lot of folks are going to be interested in checking out the event.

The first video is the teaser, the second is one that gives it all away.

source: Roxy (YouTube, 1 & 2)

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/PhoneArena-LatestNews/~3/s30cfldHw44/Windows-Phone-8S-by-HTC-Microsoft-Surface-make-appearance-in-alluring-surfing-competition-promo_id45098

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6 elements your staffing firm contracts must include ? Business ...

criminal background checkWhen negotiating contracts with employee outsourcing firms, many organizations make background checks an afterthought and leave the specifics up to the agency. That?s a big mistake.

Routine checks by the agencies typically don?t offer enough legal protection.

That?s why you need specific language in the contracts that shields your organization. The more you outsource, the greater your legal risk.

The number of lawsuits involving outsourced workers is rising. Examples: An Indiana magazine company lost a lawsuit after using an employment agency to hire a salesman who murdered a customer. The employer was unaware of his criminal record.

In California, temporary call-center workers were indicted after stealing thousands of dollars donated for disaster relief.

Such lawsuits usually blame both the staffing agency and the hosting employer. To protect your organization from legal action, negotiate staffing contracts that do the following:

1. Spell out what background checks should cover

Specify areas such as criminal records, driver?s licenses and references. Don?t hesitate to list the same procedures that you use to screen your employees. Include the name of a reputable screening agency, preferably one that?s provided good results for you.

That?s especially important if your workplace deals with sensitive information, says Craig Annunziata, managing partner in the Chicago office of employment law firm Fisher & Phillips.

His advice: The contract language specifying background-checking procedures should begin with, ?At a minimum, the agency shall ....? That prevents the firm from later using its compliance with your procedures as a defense.

2. Include an indemnification clause

It should state that the agency covers legal expenses and judgments arising from lawsuits involving the employees it provides.

?Many agencies don?t unilaterally provide such assurance. You often have to extract it,? says Florida employment lawyer Eric Gabrielle, a partner at Stearns Weaver Miller Weissler Alhadeff & Sitterson.

3. Attach your organization to the agency?s liability coverage

Most contracts cite the agency?s liability and general liability insurance. Make sure the agreement adds your company as ?additional insured? to those policies.

4. Guarantee that you can review the results of background checks

Contracts should allow you to get a signed release from employees to read individual reports and any related documentation.

5. Allow you to terminate the contract with 30 days? notice

Watch for language that doesn?t permit termination for unsatisfactory services, or allows it under certain circumstances.

6. Comply with federal and state laws

The contract should state that the agency conducts background checks in compliance with the Fair Credit Reporting Act, and obeys federal and state laws in such areas as payroll practices, minimum wage and overtime.

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MLB All-Star Game 2013: Baseball forgives, forgets, puts Bartolo Colon on the team

Suspended? That was SO last year.

When Major League Baseball revealed the players who will grace Citi Field with their presence at this year's All-Star Game, there was no inclusion more shocking than that of Oakland A's right-hander Bartolo Colon. It's not that Colon, 40, isn't having a fine year -- the former Cy Young Award-winner is 11-3 with a 2.78 ERA (the latter figure fourth in the league), never walks anyone, and is clearly the top starter on a team that is bidding for the AL West title. He should be on the team, yet his inclusion is surprising because the Commissioner's office is widely perceived as having an unyielding, Ahab-like obsession with PED violators, and Colon wears the crimson T after testing positive for testosterone last August.

The mixed messaging from Major League Baseball is amazing. Intellectual confusion is such a tradition with the Commissioner that you might think it was almost a prerequisite for the job, but in this case it was perhaps inevitable because Colon has done so much to undermine the accepted narrative of performance-enhancing drugs, which is that they are, in fact, performance-enhancing. That this is not necessarily the case has always been obvious, but Major League Baseball has been cowed by lawmakers and self-appointed purists into embracing a stigma that simply should not exist.

The basic formulae, "Bad Hitter + Drugs = Home-Run Superman," or "Bad Pitcher + Drugs = Immortal-Bat-Throwing Vampire Roger Clemens" were always painfully simplistic and na?ve. Hitting and pitching are far more complex athletic activities than running, cycling, or heaving a discus downfield. This has been obvious for, oh, about 100 years. Consider this exchange reported by Ring Lardner in 1927. He was talking to a group of old-timers that included the great Honus Wagner, Cubs outfield great Jimmy Sheckard, and St. Louis Browns manager Dan Howley:

"We were wondering," explained Bill, "what Honus, here, would have done to that ball they played with today."

"He couldn't have hit much farther than he hit the old one," I said, waving myself to a seat on the floor.

[...]

"How about me?" said Jim Sheckard.

"One ball will go as far as another if you miss it entirely," said Dan.

That last statement holds the key to the entire PED discussion as it pertains to baseball: If you don't hit the ball, it really doesn't matter what's in your body. This brings to mind Casey Stengel's comment about Dodgers reliever Mike Marshall: "They say he's educated and he throws strikes. But say you're educated and you don't throw strikes. Then they don't leave you in too long." You can claim all kinds of explanations for a player's performance, cite all kinds of external sources, or even internal ones, but the bottom line is you have to perform. Hormone supplements, equine steroids, monkey glands, Flintstones chewables, you name it, they all have their own impact on the human body*, but none of them can give a player Barry Bonds' eye at the plate or Bartolo Colon's command of his fastball.

*I have had steroids injected directly into my eye. I did not receive heat vision, X-ray vision, heat vision, telescopic vision, microscopic vision, or even vision vision. Most crucially, I at no point exhibited the ability to track a 100-mph fastball. Even if I had, the ability to hit it over tall buildings, a quality I have always conspicuously lacked even in batting cages, would not have been addressed. More than anything else it just hurt. A lot.

Put another way: Bartolo Colon on testosterone was a pretty good pitcher, albeit one with the physique of a La-Z Boy chair. Colon off of testosterone is an even better pitcher, and he still looks like a python who is concealing an undigested Pablo Sandoval in his gastrointestinal tract. If that's the case, what does it say about the efficacy of those banned substances?

Now, some of you are no doubt saying, "He's still on something, they just haven't caught him yet." Well, maybe, but Bartolo Colon is not Lex Luthor. He's not mixing these things in his basement. For him to be on something would mean that he's found a new substance that is (a) not detectable, (b) actually works, and (c) is really, really fattening so that Colon can maintain his normal, Teddy-bear-like build, lulling us all into believing he is the rare juxtaposition of pitching god and couch potato when in actuality he is a workout-mad fiend who spends all his spare time on chemically-enhanced exercise binges which are specifically designed to hide his rippling muscles underneath a shimmering sheath of fat.*

*In the Spider-Man comics of my youth, whenever the obese Kingpin showed up, Spidey would make a fat joke and the Kingpin would inevitably be given a rejoinder along the lines of, "Fool! You mistake me for a chubbo when in actuality my appearance, which resembles that of a gigantic angry baby in a dinner jacket, conceals a body that is pure muscle. Like the sumo wrestler or the wild rhino of Sumatra, I have taken on this added girth to increase my mass!" Then the fight would stop and he and Spider-Man would discuss proper training and nutritional techniques by which one could achieve a similarly deceptive body profile while continuing to maintain cardiovascular fitness. At some point Daredevil would show up and they'd all be attacked by ninjas.

The truth is far less complex: Trust your eyes. What you're seeing is what you're seeing. Maybe Colon's testosterone helped his aged, ballooning body limber up for each start, or made it possible for him to walk out of the stadium under his own power afterwards, but so does aspirin. Maybe he's on something else now. Baseball has drawn a line that certain substances are beyond the pale, and thus Colon is legitimately a lawbreaker in the eyes of the sport. But don't for a minute forget how arbitrary that line is, or how uncertain they are of the effects.

Josh Donaldson (USA Today Sports)

Let's go beyond "arbitrary" to "hypocritical," because just as Baseball cared little when there was ample evidence that Mark McGwire, Sammy Sosa, and pals were getting their muscles out of a can, the selection of Colon to the All-Star team, something they in no way were forced to do, means that the Commissioner's office has officially forgiven Colon his past trespasses and validated his current achievements. He is, officially, a star of the game. And don't wave the sad, "every team must be represented flag," because this year's Most-Stiffed by the Selections Award goes to Oakland third baseman Josh Donaldson.

Colon doesn't need to be at Citi Field, Baseball chose to put him there. He's served his time, he's all right, and baseball is all right with him. Remember that when, Ahab-like, they drown the game in Biogenesis nonsense sometime between now and the start of next season. Like the All-Star game itself, it's just a lot of show.

More from SB Nation:

? When Buster got called out for hitting a double

? The best pitcher MLB's never heard of

? Vote for Yasiel Puig, says Adrian Gonzalez

? Scott Hairston traded to Nationals

? AL All-Star rosters | NL All-Star rosters | More coverage

? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?

Source: http://www.sbnation.com/mlb/2013/7/8/4504648/mlb-all-star-game-2013-bartolo-colon-testosterone-peds

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Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Win an LG 3D Cinema Smart TV @ LG @ Facebook

Product: an LG 3D Cinema Smart TV

Period: Once

Availability: Both

Like their page, answer the question and enter your details.

Name a movie sequel you think is better than the original?

Completion message :
Your entry has been submitted!
GOOD LUCK!

Rules: 1. To enter sweepstake competition fill in all the required details. 2. Competition closes at 18:00pm on July 24th, 2013. The winner will be picked at random and contacted via email on the 25th July. If the winner does not respond via email within 48 hours from sending, another winner will be picked. 3. The prize is 1x 42LA740V 4. Open to UK residents aged 18 or over 5. No cash alternative. Prizes are non-transferable 6. Only one entry per valid email address. (email address will be used to contact the winner but will NOT be stored for any future use by LG and/or it's partners. 7. The Promoter: LG Electronics UK Ltd. 250-252 Bath Road, Slough, SL1 4DX, UK 8. This promotion is in no way sponsored, endorsed or administered by, or associated with, Facebook. You are providing information to LG Electronics UK Ltd. and not to Facebook. 9. Competition is not open to any LG or affiliated companies' employees

Source: http://www.hotukdeals.com/competitions/win-an-lg-3d-cinema-smart-tv-lg-facebook-1602453

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Jonathan Handel: Samsung Galaxy S4 Screen Protectors Review



There are dozens of film screen protectors designed for application to the S4 screen. These protect against minor scratches.

If you want a more premium film, you have several choices. A popular choice is the ZAGG invisibleSHIELD High Definition, described by ZAGG as the number one selling scratch protection available. It's a thin film that the company says "has its origins in the military, where it was used to protect high-speed helicopter blades from dust, dirt and debris." (They also say it's patented, but it's not; when I looked up the patent, I discovered that what's patented is the box the product comes in!) The company offers a free lifetime replacement warranty for the product - not surprisingly, since the company website has YouTube videos of an iPhone being hammered at, attacked with a drill and even having bricks drop on it, all without damage.

Another rugged film is the Amzer ShatterProof, which the company says is "Army-grade protection." I found that it resisted scratches, but that the film could be indented if you tried deliberately. I? scratched gently with a box cutter and had no difficulty producing an indentation. The indentations did not "heal"; they remained. But, again, it required a deliberate attempt to produce this effect. It too comes with a lifetime replacement warranty.

A bargain-priced film, available in a 3-pack, is the Tech Armor HD Clear. It resisted scratches, but could be damaged with deliberate effort.

If you want a protector that's stronger - and smoother - than plastic films, you can go with one that's made of glass, such as the BodyGuardz Pure, made of "special chemically-tempered glass exceeding the hardness of steel." A company video shows someone hammering at the screen protector - while it's on an iPhone. The phone survived undamaged. I didn't try this test myself on the Pure or any of the other screen protectors, figuring that potentially destroying my phone fell in the category of "kids, don't try this at home."


I did, however, try hammering the Pure when it wasn't on the phone. It didn't break. If you do manage to ever damage the Pure (accidentally, one assumes), you can get a replacement for a small fee to cover shipping. (That's a replacement of the Pure, not of your phone!)


I like the Pure, especially since it's smoother than a plastic screen protector. That makes using the phone feel more natural and comfortable. However, the glass makes the phone a bit heavier. Also, although advertised as smudge proof, the Pure readily retained smudges.



The Pure is 0.4 mm thick - that's twice the thickness of the Amzer film, for example - and you'll want to determine whether it will be compatible with your case. The company has a short list of yea's and nays. I tested it with two representative cases that I reviewed, the plastic+silicon Seidio Active and the snap-on Musubo Chamfer and found no problem.

However, I found it difficult to attach the Pure correctly, which is of course a risk with any screen protector. The screen protector adheres very quickly and firmly. I followed the installation instructions, which involve using an included suction cup to hold the Pure as you apply it, but I ended up with the screen protector misaligned. I also had a few small bubbles that have refused to disappear (as well as some large ones that disappeared within a day). I might have had better luck attaching the protector using the "hinge method" instead.


The problem with misalignment is not only that it looks snarky, but also that the Pure has a cutout that gives very little clearance for the front camera. With the Pure misaligned, I found that light could flare across the edge of the cutout and into the lens of the front camera, which sometimes created artifacts akin to lens flare.


Luckily, it's easy to remove the Pure: you just slide your fingernail under the glass and work it around the edge. When enough of the adhesion has dissipated, you shove a piece of paper between the Pure and the screen and work at it. Within a minute or so, the screen protector is off. No residue remains, because the adhesion depends on a specially engineered surface rather than any kind of sticky glue.


You can then wash the Pure with soap and water and reapply. This time the adhesion is not instantaneous, so it's a little easier to position the screen protector. But I found that I ended up with many more bubbles, many of them presumably due to dust particles, but also including two large areas on the edge of the screen. These did not affect responsiveness to touch, however. Bottom line: if you mess up the application of the Pure, you'll have little trouble removing it, but don't count on being able to reuse it unless you're tolerant of bubbles and the like.



Another glass screen protector is the iloome ScreenMate. It's more tolerant of misalignment than the Pure, because (unlike the Pure) it doesn't have a cutout for the sensors and front camera. Instead, the sensors and front camera are covered by glass, which means it's particularly important that there not be a bubble or bit of dust in those locations. Curiously, the ScreenMate does not include an alcohol wipe for cleaning the screen before application of the protector.


At 0.26 mm, the ScreenMate is thinner than the Pure and scarcely thicker than a film protector such as the Amzer. That may make the ScreenMate compatible with more case designs than the Pure, though as noted above, I didn't find any problem using the Pure with two very common designs. In any event, when I hammered at the ScreenMate (while it was not on a phone), it didn't shatter. So 0.26 mm seems to be thick enough.



I also examined the Tech Armor Ballistic Glass protector. Curiously, this product is identical to the Pure: not only does the product have the same uniquely-shaped cutout for the sensors and front camera, in fact the packaging is identical: the construction of the box, the markings ("OPEN") on the plastic package insert, the inclusion of a suction cup, etc. In every respect, the Bodyguardz Pure and the TechArmor Ballistic Glass are the same product.


I asked representatives of both companies to explain this and ultimately was told that they both probably used the same Asian supplier. The reason I installed the Pure is simply that I received the product sample first. I believe that my comments on the Pure apply equally to the Ballistic Glass, and thus your experience with either product is likely to be the same. I have no opinion as to which product came first.



Another option is the Spigen Glas.tR Slim (0.4 mm thick, and with curved bevel edges to the glass to reduce chipping); it covers the front camera but not the sensors. However, the cutout is close to the sensors, meaning that proper alignment is important, although perhaps a little less so than for the BodyGuardz and Tech Armor products. The product also includes a plastic film protector for the back cover of the phone, which I suppose is useful if you don't have a case for it. Spigen also offers the Glas.t Slim (0.28 mm, and no curved bevel; not reviewed).

Finally, I checked out the XGear Sentinel. The shape is similar to the Spigen. Like the iloome, there is no alcohol wipe included with the product.

Adding a glass screen protector has an unavoidable side effect: the home button, which wasn't very prominent to begin with, is now slightly recessed. To rectify this, the products reviewed come with plastic jelly bean stick-on buttons in black and white (one of each is included; the Spigen product includes an orange one as well). One exception: XGear's product only includes one button, in black, but it's aluminum. In addition, Spigen offers aluminum buttons for separate purchase.


Truth to tell, other than the shape of the cutout and the type of home button stickon included (or not), all of these glass products are pretty similar. Whichever one you choose, I recommend using it with a case, to help protect the edge of the screen protector from chipping.



That's it for screen protectors. Look for my next installment, where I examine a few more cases for the S4. Afterward will come speakers and other sound accessories, video (such as how to connect your cellphone to a TV), chargers and external batteries, how to use your cellphone as a portable office, and miscellaneous accessories. You can find all this at http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jonathan-handel/.

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Follow Jonathan Handel on Twitter: www.twitter.com/jhandel

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jonathan-handel/samsung-galaxy-s4-screen_b_3564284.html?utm_hp_ref=technology

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NBA Summer League 2013: Pistons vs. Nets

Detroit's Summer League action starts at 5p EST today.

Pistons vs. Nets

Tip: 5:00 EST

How to see it: NBA TV or NBA.com downloadable gizmo

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

The Pistons' promising draft class joins Andre Drummond, Kyle Singler, Kim English, Khris Middleton and CTRL-V and, well, filler. Drummond is not expected to log heavy minutes, in anticipation of the USA basketball mini-camp later this month.

Here's a quick rundown of things to look for.

Does Tony Mitchell show up?

The biggest concerns around Tony Mitchell concern not his talent, but his ability to stay interested in the game. A meaningless Summer League game will be a good test of whether or not he is going to take this seriously.

Does Kentavious have NBA range?

Based on his college profile, the three point shot projects to figure heavily into KCP's arsenal. His ability to transition to the longer distance will say a lot about whether he thrives at the NBA level.

Can Siva run the offense?

That's a bit broad, but I think the spotlight is on Siva in the coming months. The starting point guard position is a major question mark at this juncture, and it's clear at this point the Pistons are going to need contributions from Peyton Siva in some capacity.

Can Kim English get it together?

English kinda forgot how to shoot last year. Was it a case of a rookie contending with an unpredictable role on the team, or were his Missouri numbers simply a function of the Tigers' hyper-efficient offense? I'd like to see him take a lead role as a scorer in summer league.

A couple points to consider:

As a general rule, dominating Summer League indicates relatively little (famously so, around these parts). However, a poor Summer League showing tends to be cause for concern. Simply put, NBA caliber players should dominate the competition, but doing so doesn't necessarily equate to stardom.

The minute allocations should tell us something about how the Pistons' organization regards these players. If KCP has a shot at the starting job, you would certainly expect him to start today. If the Pistons are serious about giving Tony Mitchell a chance to thrive, you will see serious minutes for him today, and perhaps even a starting role.

There are enough bad players on the floor that even the good ones are going to look bad. Keep an eye on the box scores, which will tell you more about how the players are doing than the general ebb and flow of what is essentially and amateur pickup game.

What are you looking forward to during Summer League action? Still hungover from the Josh Smith signing? Don't take it out on your family. Take it out in the comments section!

? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?

Source: http://www.detroitbadboys.com/2013/7/7/4500862/nba-summer-league-2013-pistons-vs-nets

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