শুক্রবার, ২৬ এপ্রিল, ২০১৩

Kyocera Elite for Verizon and XTRM for US Cellular both leaked

Kyocera Elite for Verizon and XTRM of US Cellular leaked

Kyocera does a good line in rugged (and often unconventional) smartphones, although this pair of leaked handsets, apparently headed to Verizon (left) and US Cellular (right), both appear to cut a more typical profile. As is often the way with serial leak artist @evleaks, there's no full spec sheet to hand, although the US Cellular-bound XTRM appears to been given some bumper protection around the corners and will likely match that hardy name. Verizon will get the LTE-capable Elite, although we'll have to wait for either the carriers -- or Kyocera itself -- to let us in on all the other details.

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Via: Phone Arena

Source: @evleaks (Twitter)

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/aJesMyueqSM/

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Joe Mirabella: 325,000 All Out Members Celebrate French Marriage Victory

This week the French National Assembly passed the final version of a bill that would allow gays and lesbians to marry in that country.

"This is a historic moment that the world should celebrate," said Andre Banks, Executive Director and co-founder of All Out, the global movement for love and equality with more than 325,000 members in France who spoke out for marriage equality. "Once the constitutional court reviews the bill and President Hollande signs the bill, loving and committed gay and lesbian couples will finally be able to marry in France."

France will be the 14th country in the world to allow gay and lesbian couples to marry.

All Out members were actively engaged in passing the bill. More than 325,000 All Out members signed the largest petition for equality in French history and delivered it directly to their MPs. All Out members organized pro-marriage rallies in 17 cities throughout the country. Members also raised enough money to purchase an ad in Le Monde on the day of the Senate vote. The ad went viral online and reached half a million people. Additionally, more than 1 million people saw an All Out celebration graphic online following the Senate vote.

"I am very proud of All Out's members who worked tirelessly to pass the freedom to marry bill in France," Andre Banks said. "With more than 325,000 active voices, All Out's members proved that the fight for love and equality is stronger than any threat of violence or anger. Love won today, and it will win time and time again as we continue to push for equality around the world."

"This is a great day for France, and for the world," Guillaume Bonnet, All Out's Senior Campaigner for France, said. "I'm proud my country will be a strong voice for freedom as All Out continues to work around the world for love and equality."

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Follow Joe Mirabella on Twitter: www.twitter.com/joemirabella

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/joe-mirabella/325000-all-out-members-celebrate-french-marriage-victory_b_3140271.html

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Insert Coin: Snapzoom gives Kickstarters a crack at its smartphone scope adapter (video)

In Insert Coin, we look at an exciting new tech project that requires funding before it can hit production. If you'd like to pitch a project, please send us a tip with "Insert Coin" as the subject line.

Snapzoom gives Kickstarters a crack at its smartphone scope adapter

Snapzoom stole a lot of hearts at Engadget Expand, but it didn't quite steal enough votes to win our Insert Coin contest. Now you can exact some justice, as the smartphone adapter for binoculars, telescopes and microscopes is up for grabs on Kickstarter to let you zoom in on the moon, bacteria or whatever else you can think of. So far it's vacuumed up $15,000 toward its $55,000 goal, and while the early bird offer is sold out, backers can still grab one starting at $60, a hefty discount from the final $80 retail price. For $90, you'll even get a basic 10x25 compact Bushnell travel binocular tossed in, so if you want to see what made our Insert Coin judges go zoom-crazy, hit the source or video after the jump.

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Source: Snapzoom (Kickstarter)

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/04/25/insert-coin-snapzoom-on-kickstarter/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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China sends largest fleet yet to disputed islands

China sent a fleet of patrol ships today to the sea area it disputes with Japan, following a controversial visit by Japanese officials to a war shrine. The latest moves are seen as a setback for a diplomatic resolution.

By Ralph Jennings,?Correspondent / April 23, 2013

Chinese surveillance ships sail in formation in waters claimed by Japan near disputed islands called Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China in the East China Sea Tuesday.

Kyodo News/AP

Enlarge

Spats between Asia?s two most powerful nations, China and Japan, have grown uncomfortably routine since Tokyo nationalized a group of disputed islands in September. On Tuesday tensions reached a new and potentially worrisome high.

Skip to next paragraph Ralph Jennings

Taiwan Correspondent

Ralph Jennings has covered news in China, Taiwan and Southeast Asia for the past 14 years. He lives in Taipei and holds a degree in mass communication from the University of California in Berkeley.?

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China sent eight surveillance vessels into Japanese territorial waters, apparently to track a flotilla of Japanese activists who had gone to look at the contested area. China?s presence ? an effort to exercise authority in the region ? is its largest since Japan nationalized the uninhabited islets, Kyodo News reported.

China?s use of ships in disputed waters isn?t expected to cause a war, but it raises the specter of a miscalculation at sea that could in turn create a new diplomatic row, set off more protests in Chinese cities, and strike another blow at Japanese business caught in the crossfire. Hopes of polite negotiations are also off the map for now.

"Only when Japan faces up to its aggressive past can it embrace the future and develop friendly relations with its Asian neighbors," Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying told a news conference on Monday.

As if the 80 pro-Tokyo activists weren?t enough to upset Beijing, that same day 168 Japanese lawmakers visited a Shinto shrine that?s reviled elsewhere in Asia for memorializing World War II heroes. Japan occupied parts of China from 1931 to 1945. Three cabinet ministers had already visited Yasukuni Shrine over the weekend, causing calculated reaction.

In protest, a high-level Chinese military official bailed on a trip this week to Japan as the foreign ministry lashed out.?

And China?s surveillance vessels probably weren?t loaded with olive branches. The Communist country has increasingly jousted?with Japan since around 2005 as it rose to become the world?s second largest economy.

?Such an intrusion [in the East China Sea] was certainly not undertaken spontaneously, but would have been planned and coordinated some time in advance for execution as soon as an opportunity presented itself,? says Scott Harold, associate political scientist with US-based think tank the RAND Corporation.

Japan controls the disputed islets, which it calls the Senkakus, despite 40 years of competing claims from China and a wave of destructive anti-Japanese street protests in Chinese cities last year. China criticizes the Shinto shrine visits because a memorial at the venue also honors 14 major war criminals.

The two sides are also disputing rights to an undersea natural gas field, while China periodically accuses Japan of not apologizing for the war of the 1940s. Japan says it has apologized.?

China and Japan, as the world?s No. 2 and No. 3 economies, also mean a lot to each other trade wise. The number of Japanese subsidiaries in China has grown eight times since the 1990s, and they sold $147 billion worth of goods to the country in the 2011 fiscal year.

Will the two keep meeting, along with South Korea, to discuss a three-way trade agreement? After momentum last month, the latest raises concern that this puts progress on ice.

?Both sides need to be more flexible,? suggests Ralph Cossa, president with US think tank Pacific Forum Center for Strategic and International Studies. ?Japan needs to acknowledge that the territory is in dispute, at least from a Chinese perspective, and the Chinese need to acknowledge that they are under Japan?s administrative control and that a military solution is unacceptable.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/JNlHK-p_sik/China-sends-largest-fleet-yet-to-disputed-islands

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বৃহস্পতিবার, ২৫ এপ্রিল, ২০১৩

RI lawmakers to vote on gay marriage

PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) ? State lawmakers in Rhode Island could decide whether the nation's smallest state becomes the 10th to allow gay and lesbian couples to marry.

Following months of review and debate, the state Senate is set to vote on gay marriage legislation Wednesday afternoon. The bill easily passed the House in January and has the support of independent Gov. Lincoln Chafee.

Gay marriage legislation has been introduced in Rhode Island's General Assembly for nearly two decades only to languish on the legislative agenda. Heavily Catholic Rhode Island is now the only state in New England that does not allow same-sex couples to marry. Gay marriage is law in nine states and the District of Columbia.

Wednesday's vote comes after the Senate Judiciary Committee voted 7-4 Tuesday to forward the legislation to the Senate floor. Dozens of supporters cheered and cried following the vote. Ken Fish, a 70-year-old gay man from Warwick, said he watched the committee vote with a mixture of disbelief and elation.

"It's almost unreal to think we're here, after all these years," he said. "I wasn't sure we'd ever get here."

If the bill passes the Senate it must return to the House for a largely procedural vote on small changes made to the bill on the Senate side. House Speaker Gordon Fox, D-Providence, said a final vote could come as early as next week.

Support for the bill has grown since it passed the House in January. On Tuesday, the Senate's five Republicans announced they would all support the legislation, further improving the bill's chances.

"We've got one more step, but I expect it to pass with overwhelming support," said Sen. Dawson Hodgson, R-North Kingstown.

Opponents aren't giving up on efforts to turn back the legislation. Sen. Harold Metts, D-Providence, said he planned to fast and pray ahead of Wednesday's debate.

"Culture may change, but God has an immutable character," he said. "I'll be praying all night."

Chafee encouraged supporters to contact their senators ahead of the vote but signaled that he thinks the bill will pass, saying in a statement that "I believe that when the roll is called, marriage equality will become law in Rhode Island."

The Senate has long been seen as the true test for gay marriage in Rhode Island. Two years ago, gay marriage legislation languished after it became apparent it would be defeated in the Senate. Senate President Teresa Paiva Weed, D-Newport, opposes the bill but has vowed not to obstruct debate.

The Rhode Island legislation states that religious institutions may set their own rules for who is eligible to marry within their faith and specifies that no religious leader is obligated to officiate at any marriage ceremony. While ministers already cannot be forced to marry anyone, the exemption helped assuage concerns from some lawmakers that clergy could face lawsuits for abiding by their religious convictions.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ri-lawmakers-vote-gay-marriage-062021344.html

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বুধবার, ২৪ এপ্রিল, ২০১৩

Deep, permeable soils buffer impacts of crop fertilizer on Amazon streams

Apr. 24, 2013 ? The often damaging impacts of intensive agriculture on nearby streams, rivers, and their wildlife has been well documented in temperate zones, such as North America and Europe.

Yet a new study in an important tropical zone -- the fast-changing southern Amazon, a region marked by widespread replacement of native forest by cattle ranches and more recently croplands -- suggests that at least some of those damaging impacts may be buffered by the very deep and highly permeable soils that characterize large areas of the expanding cropland.

The study, led by Christopher Neill, director of the Ecosystems Center at the Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL), is published this week in the journal Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B. This entire journal issue is devoted to the consequences of massive land-use changes in Mato Grosso, Brazil, the Amazon's biggest and most dynamic agricultural frontier.

"Over the past two decades, Mato Grosso has experienced both the highest rates of deforestation (mostly for pasture and soya bean expansion) and the greatest reduction in deforestation rates (associated with [government] policies and macroeconomic factors) in the Amazon," write the editors of the issue, who include Neill's collaborator Michael T. Coe of Woods Hole Research Center. "The regional focus of this issue allows for a deep assessment of the complex ecological and social changes related to agricultural transformation of a tropical forest environment."

Neill's study looked specifically at the impacts of soybean agriculture on water quality and quantity at Tanguro Ranch, a nearly 200,000-acre farm similar in climate and geography to large tracts of the Amazon where soybean production, largely for export as animal feed, is expanding rapidly.

The ranch has watersheds that are entirely forested, as well as watersheds that are now entirely soybean cropland, allowing for a comparison.

"We were surprised to find that, despite intensive agriculture at Tanguro Ranch, the streams do not appear to be receiving a significant amount of either nitrogen or phosphorus, despite a high application of phosphorus fertilizer to adjacent cropland," says Neill.

This is in contrast to many Northern Hemisphere cropland areas where fertilizers are known to add nutrients to the soil that, with rainfall, run off into freshwater streams and rivers, leading to over-fertilization and low-oxygen conditions that endanger fish and other aquatic life.

At Tanguro Ranch, however, "the soils are old and highly weathered, very deep, and likely to be fairly uniform over great depths," Neill says. "Water infiltrates the soil very rapidly, and the soil has a great capacity to absorb the nutrients. It appears to act as an enormous buffer."

However, this situation is in transition, he notes. "The southeastern Amazon is a very fast-moving environment of change. Right now, most soybean fields are not fertilized with nitrogen. But that will change because the Amazon is poised for large increases in nitrogen fertilizer use as double-cropping (soybeans plus corn) becomes more prevalent," Neill says. "So it's quite possible we will see greater effects on water quality in the future."

The study also noted impacts of deforestation on the quantity of water entering streams. Typically, after a forest is cut down,

about four times more surface water runs off into small streams because of reduced evaporation to the atmosphere. However, at Tanguro Ranch, rainfall infiltrates quickly into the soil and streams are fed predominantly by groundwater, so stream levels don't fluctuate dramatically, during either the wet and dry seasons, even in cropland watersheds.

"We don't see large changes to the structure of stream channels in small headwater streams, " Neill says. "But in the bigger rivers, we see a cumulative impact of all the extra water from those small streams piling up. When larger rivers have to handle that extra water caused by deforestation, they change geomorphically; their floodplains get re-arranged. Those are also rivers that people use for water supplies, fishing, and transportation. "

Finally, the study showed that the agricultural streams were warmer than the forested streams, caused both by a reduction in bordering forest and the presence of impoundments (small human-made dams).

"Warmer water has implications for the fish," Neill says, "because it holds less oxygen. Warmer water also increases fish metabolism, so fish need more food. We don't know if warming and other changes associated with expanding cropland also increase fish food supply -- if they don't, some fish may not have enough energy to survive."

Neill has been working at Tanguro Ranch since 2007 with collaborators from Woods Hole Research Center, Brown University, the Amazon Environmental Research Institute (IPAM), and the University of S?o Paulo. Other authors in this journal issue include MBL Senior Scientist Linda Deegan; Shelby Riskin and Gillian Galford, both of whom graduated from the Brown-MBL Graduate Program in Biological and Environmental Sciences; and Brown-MBL faculty members Stephen Porder, Leah VanWey, and Jack Mustard.

"Tanguro Ranch is the focus of a huge amount of the science on land transitions and social-ecological dynamics in the Amazon," says Marty Downs, associate director of Brown University's Environmental Change Initiative.

Neill's study was funded by grants from the National Science Foundation, the Fundac?o de Amparo ? Pesquisa do Estado de S?o Paulo, the Packard Foundation, the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, and the Brazilian Council for Scientific and Technological Development.

Theme Issue Ecology, economy and management of an agroindustrial frontier landscape in the southeast Amazon, compiled and edited by Paulo M. Brando, Michael T. Coe and Ruth DeFries. Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc. B, June 5, 2013.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Marine Biological Laboratory. The original article was written by Diana Kenney.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. C. Neill, M. T. Coe, S. H. Riskin, A. V. Krusche, H. Elsenbeer, M. N. Macedo, R. McHorney, P. Lefebvre, E. A. Davidson, R. Scheffler, A. M. e. S. Figueira, S. Porder, L. A. Deegan. Watershed responses to Amazon soya bean cropland expansion and intensification. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 2013; 368 (1619): 20120425 DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2012.0425

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_environment/~3/qTiynJImWjs/130424112312.htm

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Most Canadian Homeowners Have No Plans to Downsize

Recently I wrote a Realty Times story quoting professor John Andrew about a trend for Canadians to move to smaller homes and condominiums. Based on a Statistics Canada report, Andrew said demand will increase for smaller units in cities, and there may be less demand for three- and four-bedroom homes in the suburbs.

But since that story, several housing observers have said the baby boomer generation and their children are not finished with those big homes yet.

A recent survey by Leger Marketing, sponsored by Royal LePage Real Estate, found the demand for suburban detached homes remains strong among baby boomers and their children, known as Generation Y.

"Baby boomers are the wealthiest generation in Canadian history," says Phil Soper, CEO of Royal LePage. "They live in large homes with ample space for their many possessions. They love their garages and their yards. This study clearly indicates that contrary to popular belief, most boomers do not intend to downsize anytime soon."

Just over 40 per cent of boomers surveyed said they planned to move, but of that group, almost half plan to buy a home that?s the same size or larger than their current house.

Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. (CMHC) says that Canadians aged 55 to 64 have the highest rates of homeownership among all age groups, at about 78 per cent. In households where the primary household maintainer is aged 75 or more, 67.9 per cent are homeowners.

"The biggest increase in age-specific ownership rates in recent decades has been among those 65-74 and 75 plus," says Adrienne Warren of Scotiabank Economics.

"Contrary to some dire predictions, population aging will not fuel a demographically induced selloff in Canadian real estate," she says. "Today?s seniors are healthier, wealthier and living longer than prior generations. They are increasingly likely to own their own home and to live in their homes for longer. Many will not need to tap into their principal home to finance retirement."

CMHC says about 85 per cent of Canadians over 55-years-old want to remain in their current home for as long as possible, according to a 2008 study conducted by the federal housing agency.

One reason why boomers are choosing to stay in their larger homes is because the next generation hasn?t moved out yet.

"The adult children of baby boomers aren?t going anywhere fast," says Soper. "Good jobs have proven more difficult for them to find, they?re extending their studies and they?re living at home. It is no wonder the concept of swapping a family-sized home for a small retreat has lost its lustre."

But when Generation Y (born between 1980 and 1994) is ready to buy a home, most intend to purchase in the suburbs, says the Leger Marketing survey. Fifty-five per cent said they would buy in the suburbs, while 21.7 said they would prefer living in the downtown core of a city.

"The young people who make up Generation Y are our first-time home buyers," says Soper. "Like their parents, they dream of owning a lovely house in the suburbs, which provides value as well as access to parkland for children to play and the perception of greater family safety. Even as condominium living becomes more popular across Canada, the study results do not point to a corresponding decrease in demand for traditional single-family homes. For the baby boomers that do head downtown, there is a generation waiting to move in."

Immigrants are likely to become more important to Canadian population growth during the next 20 years and currently account for almost two-thirds of growth.

Scotiabank says that immigrants are more likely to settle in large and mid-sized urban centres than their Canadian-born counterparts, and that immigrant households are twice as likely to live in a condominium as non-immigrant families. Affordability is cited as the main reason for this choice.

CMHC?s Online Guide for Older Canadians says that ethnic groups have different settlement patterns and housing preferences. "For example, immigrants from Hong Kong typically bypass inner-city reception areas in favour of immediate settlement in the suburbs."

It says that a study of a Toronto suburb "found that immigrants from Italy had the highest rate of homeownership (95 per cent) followed by immigrants from Hong Kong, Portugal, Germany, the People?s Republic of China, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom and India. The study also found that immigrant housing preferences come to resemble the preferences of Canadian-born households over time; that is, they tend to choose single-detached homes in low-density suburbs."

A TD Economics report about the long-term outlook for house prices says: "In our projections, we have assumed that baby boomers will not sell their homes in droves, driving down average prices. Even if they did - and the jury is still out on how many will downgrade their properties - baby boomers will not all sell their homes on the same day. These adjustments happen over years, which mitigate their impact."

Published: April 23, 2013

Use of this article without permission is a violation of federal copyright laws.




Source: http://realtytimes.com/rtpages/20130423_cahomeowners.htm

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