Sunday, November 27, 2011

In 2012 race, GOP candidates rely less on fill-ins (AP)

MANCHESTER, N.H. ? At Mitt Romney's New Hampshire headquarters, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie played a time-worn shtick for the cameras, picking up a telephone alongside volunteers who were dialing undecided voters on behalf of the candidate they support.

Christie actually called Romney and the two chatted about an upcoming debate.

"Be yourself," Christie advised, as he accomplished what he needed to while a dozen reporters watched: He generated positive media attention for a candidate who was elsewhere at the time.

When they can't be in New Hampshire, Iowa and other early voting states, presidential hopefuls traditionally have sent others in their stead.

But this campaign season, surrogates such as Christie have been scarce, in large part because the field of candidates was so slow to develop. Christie, for example, thought of jumping in until October.

"In the past, you would have had full campaign staffs for all the candidates six to eight months out at least, and some campaigns here are still just starting to put boots on the ground," said South Carolina political consultant Luke Byars.

He said aside from the candidates' wives and adult children, no stand-ins have spoken in his state, though he expects activity will pick up.

"I still think that's going to happen, it's just a question of time," he said. "It takes resources and staff to make that happen."

In Iowa, Rick Perry's wife, Anita, has campaigned and one of Romney's sons Josh, filled in for his father this month at the Iowa Republican Party's Ronald Reagan dinner in Des Moines. But that's nothing compared with 2008, when Romney's five sons traveled the country in a Winnebago that became known as the "Five Brothers Bus," while Josh Romney drove through all 99 Iowa counties.

New Hampshire has seen a bit more activity beyond politicians' family members. In addition to Christie making pitches for Romney, former Homeland Security Secretary and Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Ridge has campaigned for Jon Huntsman. But otherwise traffic has been light.

Tom Rath, a veteran New Hampshire political operative who has advised Romney's presidential campaigns in 2008 and this year, said surrogates are of limited use in states where voters are accustomed to close encounters with the candidates.

"Frankly, New Hampshire doesn't take kindly to surrogates. We like the candidate. We're spoiled. We see the candidate a lot. We expect to see the candidate. So you have to be very careful," he said. "You can't do them a lot here."

He does consider Christie the ideal type of surrogate, someone who can bring independent validation of a candidate's message and explain clearly how he came to his endorsement.

That's exactly what Christie did recently when he attended an evening house party for more than 100 people in Nashua. He emphasized what he said were Romney's strengths, criticized Obama and described why he decided to back Romney. He threw in the requisite local references, praising former Gov. John H. Sununu and Sen. Kelly Ayotte, though he mispronounced the latter's last name (AY'-aht).

He finished with a blunt line that drew laughter.

"If there are any of you here tonight who are not yet committed, you better be committed by the time I come back the next time," he said. "I've been real nice to you tonight, and I will not be the next time if you are still on the fence."

In the audience, Paul Laflamme of Nashua said he remained undecided but enjoyed hearing from Christie.

"I wouldn't make a decision. I wouldn't commit, without meeting the candidate themselves," he said. "However, Gov. Christie is incredibly smart, someone whose opinion I would respect and take into consideration. And hearing what his thought process was very helpful."

Laflamme said he's looking to be inspired by a candidate. Romney is his second choice, but he doesn't have a first one yet.

"Gov. Christie definitely made sense. He talked about not necessarily agreeing with somebody 100 percent of the time but finding the person who's the right person to be president at this time, and that very well could be Gov. Romney," he said.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111127/ap_on_go_ot/us_sending_surrogates

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Saturday, November 26, 2011

The 'increasingly intolerable' glut of GOP debates: 4 consequences (The Week)

New York ? Republicans have already squared off nearly a dozen times ? and they're only halfway through the debate season

With the Republican presidential candidates constantly slugging it out in a seemingly endless stream of televised showdowns, it seems likely that 2011 will be remembered as the "year of the debate," says Michael Calderone at The Huffington Post. The 11th major debate of the campaign season was held on Tuesday, Nov. 22, and there are nearly a dozen more GOP primary debates still to come. Plenty of people are watching, and the candidate forums appear to be having a major impact on the race. How? Here, four consequences of the "increasingly intolerable" glut of debates:

1. Gaffes are blown way out of proportion
The media has been "lapping up every big 'viral' moment, making the most of the gaffes and stumbles and eternally questing for the next meltdown," says Jason Linkins at The Huffington Post. As a result, the slip-ups are overshadowing the substance of many of the debates, making them matter more than they should. "The early debates helped introduce the candidates to the Republican primary electorate," says Byron York in the Washington Examiner, and the later ones will help undecided voters make up their minds. But many in the middle served little purpose ? other than to provide another "occasion for a major gaffe or gotcha."

SEE MORE: The GOP's 'elimination round' debate: 4 key questions

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2. Serious candidates are taken less seriously
"We are essentially witnessing Republican presidential politics morph into a kind of right-wing reality TV series," says Ryan Lizza at The New Yorker. This popular elimination format has been good news for "'politainment' conservatives like Michele Bachmann, Herman Cain, and Newt Gingrich, and not so great for successful governors like Tim Pawlenty, Jon Huntsman, and Rick Perry." Some veteran Republicans worry this is the wrong image to project when picking a candidate for the job of leading the free world, says Michael D. Shear in The New York Times. The cumulative effect of all the embarrassing moments, they fear, may be the weakening of "the party brand, especially in foreign policy and national security, where Republicans have typically dominated Democrats."?

3."Retail" campaigning isn't what it used to be
"Once, it was the vaunted campaign machine, or the bulging bank accounts, or the number of key endorsements that defined who was up and who was down," says Ken Rudin at NPR. But this year, those elements of "retail" campaigning aren't all that critical. It really just seems to be the debates that matter. "Never before in a campaign cycle has the story line ? the rise and fall of frontrunners, the fluctuations in the polls ? been almost exclusively about what comes out of the debates."

SEE MORE: The 'disgraceful' CBS debate: Did the network mess up?

?

4. Candidates are getting tired
This isn't easy for the Republicans, says Rupert Cornwell in Britain's Independent. Sure, they "get free exposure" from the nationally televised debates, but in each forum, they have to keep tacking to the right to win over conservative primary voters. As the debate season drags on, every appearance means another occasion to let something slip that will be "fodder for the Obama campaign" in the general election, when the challenge will be wooing moderates and independents. No wonder "some candidates have suggested they might skip a few, if only to conserve their energy."

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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/oped/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/theweek/20111125/cm_theweek/221703

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Sony VAIO VPC-F237FX/B


Do you want to quibble? OK, let's quibble: Considering its $1,399 street price, it would be nice if the Sony VAIO VPC-F237FX/B laptop came with 8GB instead of 6GB of RAM. Also, its Nvidia graphics adapter is a midrange model, not the high-end component that would permit blazing gameplay at full-screen resolution. Otherwise, we're having trouble finding serious fault with the 16.4-inch Sony, which straddles the desktop replacement and media center laptop categories with style and speed.

The VPC-F237FX/B is the 2D cousin of the 3D Sony VAIO VPC-F215FX/BI ($1,799, 4 stars). While both systems' screens have the same full 1080p (1,920-by-1,080) resolution, the Sony VPC-F215FX/BI's 3D display measures a slightly smaller 16 inches, as well as coming with a pair of active-shutter glasses not included with the 2D model. (Both come with Nvidia's 3D Vision video and photo viewers, which may confuse some 2D buyers.)

Design
In an age of aluminum laptops like the Dell XPS 15z ($999, 4 stars) and Apple MacBook Pro 15-inch (late 2011) ($1,799, 4 stars), the VPC-F237FX/B is unabashedly plastic; the screen flexes when pressed in the middle or grasped by the corners, but doesn't feel flimsy or show LCD artifacts when you press or knock the lid. Finished in somewhat fingerprint-prone basic black, the system measures 10.7 by 15.7 by 1.7 inches (HWD) and weighs 6.6 pounds. It has a handsome angular design, with a jutting front edge or lower lip when the case is closed.

The keyboard has a bright backlight, with a distracting halo of light around each key. The island-style keys offer a soft, comfortable typing feel and dedicated numeric keypad, with half-sized Home, End, Page Up, and Page Down keys above the latter. Comfortable is also a good word for the subtly textured touchpad; I prefer separate left and right buttons, but the unified button bar clicks softly and unobtrusively.

One exceptional thing about the VPC-F237X/B is its display. The 16.4-inch LCD is sunny and bright, with colors that pop and text that's clear?since the 1080p resolution is so fine, Sony's out-of-the-box setting is to show Windows text and icons at 125 percent size to make them easier to read, but my bifocal'd eyes had no trouble with the smaller type at 100 percent. Blu-ray movies looked terrific?and sounded great, too, thanks to what Sony calls S-Force Front Surround 3D, as well as Dolby Home Theater audio technology.

Features
The VPC-F237FX/B has a plethora of ports, including two USB 3.0 and one USB 2.0; HDMI and an oddly protruding VGA port; headphone and microphone jacks; Gigabit Ethernet; 802.11b/g/n Wi-Fi; and Bluetooth. At the front edge are a memory-card slot (SD/Memory Stick Pro) and a FireWire 400 (what Sony calls i.Link) port for digital video buffs, though external storage addicts will look in vain for an eSATA port. An HD (default 1,280-by-720 resolution, max 1,280-by-1,024) webcam boasts special technology for low-light performance, though its video still looked grainy to me.

The 7,200-rpm Toshiba hard drive offers a generous 640GB of storage. The Pioneer BD-RW drive can burn BD-R and BD-RE discs as well as playing Blu-ray titles and reading and writing CDs and DVDs. A warm breeze comes from a cooling vent on the left side.

Along with a scanty 30-day trial of Norton Internet Security, Sony bundles a variety of house-brand software utilities such as VAIO Gate, a Mac Dock-like program launcher that floats at the top of the screen, and Remote Keyboard, which lets users make a wireless connection to a PlayStation3 console or Bravia HDTV to input text from the laptop's keyboard (not tested here). The plums of the software assortment for multimedia fans are the Vegas Movie Studio video editing and Acid and Sound Forge music and audio editing programs, which are less friendly than Apple's iMovie and GarageBand but provide plenty of flexibility and special effects.

Performance
Sony VAIO VPC-F237FX/B We can grouse about 6GB rather than 8GB of RAM, but let's give credit where credit is due: The VPC-F237FX/B has Intel's "Sandy Bridge" Core i7-2670QM, a quad-core, eight-thread processor that runs at 2.2GHz with Turbo Mode up to 3.1GHz. With the help of the Nvidia GeForce GT 540M graphics adapter with a full 1GB of memory allows the system to go through complex applications and multimedia operations like Cookie Monster with a bag of Milanos.

In benchmark test after benchmark test, the VPC-F237FX/B outran even its recently tested relation the Sony VPC-F215FX/BI (the latter perhaps slowed slightly by its 3D overhead). The VPC-F237FX/B ran roughshod over our Photoshop CS5 image processing test in 3 minutes 46 seconds and our Handbrake video encoding test in 1:32. The Photoshop time edged even that of the speedy Acer Aspire AS8950G-9839 (3:52), as did the Sony's score of 5.34 points in our Cinebench 11.5 rendering test (the Acer AS8950G-9839 scored 4.96).

The VPC-F237FX/B also impressed in our gaming tests at 1,024 by 768 resolution with medium detail settings. It scored 58.6 frames per second (fps) in Crysis and 40.7 fps in Lost Planet 2. Cranked up to its full 1,920 by 1,080 glory with top image-quality options enabled, however, the VPC-F237FX/B began to huff and puff, dropping to an unplayable 6.9 and 13.2 fps, respectively. It did break the 10,000 barrier in 3DMark06 (10,169 at XGA resolution).

Performance-wise, the VPC-F237FX/B more or less battled to a tie with our brand-new Editors' Choice for media center laptops, the HP Pavilion dv7-6163cl ($949.99, 4 stars), which uses the same Core i7-2670QM processor. The HP was fractionally faster in Handbrake and Photoshop, but the VPC-F237FX/B won in PCMark 7 (2,556 to 2,438). The VPC-F237FX/B 's relatively small 54Wh battery, however, conked out after 4 hours 9 minutes in MobileMark 2007, while the HP dv7-6163cl 's 100Wh battery lasted for 8:24.

The HP Pavilion dv7-6163cl retains our Editors' Choice because it's such an impressive value at under $1,000?though, to be sure, it lacks two key features, a Blu-ray drive and a true 1080p display, that make the Sony VAIO VPC-F237FX/B a temptation even at $450 more. Not only will Blu-ray movie watchers gravitate toward the VPC-F237FX/B; so will shoppers seeking much of the elegance of an Apple MacBook Pro in a Windows 7 laptop, albeit a plastic- instead of aluminum-cased one.

BENCHMARK TEST RESULTS:

COMPARISON TABLE
Compare the Sony VAIO VPC-F237FX/B with several other laptops side by side.

More laptop reviews:
??? Asus Zenbook UX31-RSL8
??? HP ProBook 4430s
??? HP Pavilion dv7-6b55dx
??? Sony VAIO VPC-F237FX/B
??? Samsung Series 9 (NP900X3A-B01UB)
?? more

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/lZtV-crI3TY/0,2817,2396789,00.asp

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Screen Grabs: Covert Affairs exposes secret Rogers service in Washington DC

Screen Grabs chronicles the uses (and misuses) of real-world gadgets in today's movies and TV. Send in your sightings (with screen grab!) to screengrabs at engadget dot com.

Fans of USA's Covert Affairs know that Annie Walker's stomping ground is Washington DC, where she pretends to be a buyer for the Smithsonian. So, there's only two plausible explanations for her iPhone 4 being able to connect to Rogers Wireless Canadian network: Either she's got a nuclear powered antenna on that thing, or the company is running a south-of-the-border service for Government agencies. Some might point out that the show is filmed in Toronto for cost purposes and the art directors aren't too hot at spotting continuity errors, but we'd dismiss that as paranoid fantasy.

[Thanks, Mike G]

Screen Grabs: Covert Affairs exposes secret Rogers service in Washington DC originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 26 Nov 2011 00:48:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/11/26/screen-grabs-covert-affairs-exposes-secret-rogers-service-in-wa/

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Strong winds leave 7 dead in southern Sri Lanka (AP)

COLOMBO, Sri Lanka ? Strong winds have killed seven people along Sri Lanka's southern coast.

Pradeep Kodippili, the spokesman for the government's disaster management center, says three people were killed by fallen trees Friday in the southern coastal town of Matara.

Also on Friday, the bodies of four fishermen who had ventured out to sea from Matara were recovered. Kodippili says it was possible that their boats had been damaged by the bad weather.

He says the winds damaged about 1,000 homes in the area.

The strong winds subsided by Friday evening.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/weather/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111125/ap_on_re_as/as_sri_lanka_bad_weather

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Friday, November 25, 2011

JK Rowling: Children 'deserve privacy'

Author J.K. Rowling told the U.K. phone-hacking hearing that she felt under siege from intrusive journalists who staked out her house and went as far as to slip a letter into her 5-year-old daughter's school bag.

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The creator of boy wizard Harry Potter said Thursday that children "deserve privacy," The Guardian newspaper reported in its live blog of events.

Rowling said media interest began shortly after the publication of her first novel in 1997, and soon escalated, with photographers and reporters frequently stationed outside her home.

Once, her daughter came home from primary school and Rowling found a letter from a journalist in her backpack. Rowling said she felt a huge sense of invasion at the move.

"In the first burst of publicity surrounding [Harry Potter]. I unzipped her school bag in the evening, among the debris I found an envelope addressed to me from a journalist," she said, according to The Guardian's report.

"It's my recollection that the journalist said he intended to ask a mother at the school to put this my daughter's bag. I know no more than that, I don't know if that is how the journalist [put it in the bag]," she added.

'Angry'
"I felt such a sense of invasion that my daughter's bag ...??it's very difficult to say how angry I felt that my five-year-old daughter's school was no longer a place of complete security from journalists," Rowling said.

She also told how she had chased a photographer a week after she had given birth, The Guardian reported.

Video: Hugh Grant testifies in phone hacking inquiry (on this page)

Rowling? said she had been "besieged for a week" in her house, but had thought the photographers had left. She went outside with her daughter, but then saw a paparazzi photographer with a long lens.

"How I thought I was going to outrun a 20-something paparazzi ... my daughter was saying 'Calm down, mum, calm down, it doesn't matter,' but it mattered enormously to me," Rowling said, according to The Guardian's reported.

"The cumulative effect [of the media attention] becomes quite draining," she added.

Rowling said she thought children should not be targeted by the media.

"They deserve privacy. They have no choice who their parents are how their parents behave.... Where children are concerned the issue is fairly black and white," she said.

She also told about how two journalists from a Scottish tabloid, who were outside her house, had told her they were there because it was a "boring day at the office."

"My family and I were literally under surveillance for their amusement," she said. "There's a twist in the stomach as you wonder what do they want, what have they got? It feels incredibly threatening to have people watching you."

The inquiry into media ethics and practices is being held following the phone-hacking scandal in the U.K.

No Nazi theme at orgy
Earlier, the tribunal heard first from former Formula One motorsport boss Max Mosley, who has campaigned for a privacy law since his interest in sadomasochistic sex was exposed in a tabloid.

In 2008, Mosley won ?60,000 ($93,000) in damages from the News of the World over a story in which the paper published photos of him at a sadomasochistic orgy. The paper said incorrectly that the orgy had a Nazi theme and a judge decided the article had infringed Mosley's privacy.

Mosley, a son of Sir Oswald Mosley, former leader of the British Union of Fascists, said Thursday at the hearing that he had "never" sought publicity, BBC News reported.

Story: Phone-hacking scandal: James Murdoch insists he didn't mislead British lawmakers

"I first learnt of it (the article) about 10 o'clock on a Sunday morning," Mosley added, according to the BBC.

The Nazi allegations "were completely untrue and enormously damaging," he said. The journalist responsible for the story "simply invented the entire article," Mosley said.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45427605/ns/world_news-europe/

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Fresh iPhone Apps for Nov. 23: Macy?s Thanksgiving Day Parade, SaleLocator, Major Mayhem, Blood & Glory (Appolicious)

With only one more day before Thanksgiving, get into the spirit with Macy?s Thanksgiving Day Parade, the official app of the New York City parade, with lots of information about both the parade and New York, so you can see it in person. After that, you can get ready for the day after Thanksgiving with SaleLocator, an app that makes it easy to find the sales you?re looking for on Black Friday. Arcade shooter Major Mayhem leads our games selection today, pitting you as a lone soldier against hordes of ninjas that you?ll have to tap to kill. It?s followed by Infinity Blade-alike Blood & Glory, a gladiator title that scores extra points by being free-to-play.

For the first time, the Thanksgiving Day Parade has its own official iPhone app. You get everything you might want to know about the parade before and during the event. Macy?s Thanksgiving Day Parade packs all kinds of information about both the parade and New York City in general. But it?s not just information. The app also let you tie into NYC?s traffic cameras to get the best seats possible for the parade as it happens.

Macy?s Thanksgiving Day Parade includes a listing of all the participants with floats in the event, the parade route mapped out so you can track it as it moves through New York, information on the parade?s history and a shop where you can buy parade merchandise. You also get handy info about NYC?s subway system, nearby popular coffee shops and restaurants, and more that will help you enjoy the parade in person.

Black Friday is just two days away: Get a leg up on the competition with the help of SaleLocator, an app that helps you find the best deals in your area using your iOS device?s GPS capabilities. SaleLocator finds the nearest in-store sales and presents them to you in either a list or on a map, and gives you a rundown of just what?s covered by each store so you can plan your attack.

StoreLocator will run down nearby sales by category so you can skip the sales that don?t interest you, and it?ll aggregate especially for holidays, making it handy for events like Black Friday. You can also share sales with your friends using Facebook or Twitter, and bookmark your favorite sales so you can check them out later.

Taking a page from arcade shooting games in which players take cover from enemy fire, then stand up and shoot back, Major Mayhem puts you in the shoes of a lone soldier tasked with shooting approximately 1 million evil ninjas. The simple touch controls have players tapping at ninjas as quickly as they can to shoot them down, then taking a finger off the screen to allow Major Mayhem to drop back into cover to avoid getting shot.

You?re scored in Major Mayhem by how much mayhem you can cause ? the more shots you put in a bad guy, for example, the bigger your combo score. You?ll also shotguns, rifles, grenades and other weapons to turn the tide of war in your favor. The more enemies you blast (and friendlies you save) without taking a hit, the higher the combo you can put together. And Game Center support means you can share your best scores on the game?s online leaderboards.

Put ChAIR and Epic Games? Infinity Blade in the Roman Coliseum and Blood & Glory is what you get. It might be lifting much of its gameplay from the very popular and award-winning sword-fighting title, but Blood & Glory brings its own vibe, with the Roman setting and quite a bit of blood and gore. This one isn?t for children ? enemies look like they?re really taking injuries from your sword strikes ? but if you?re into a more hardcore style, Blood & Glory is for you.

With its simple and effective touch controls in which you?ll block, parry or dodge enemy attacks before following up with your own, you?ll also need to gather weapons and equipment to better your character and purchase potions to make sure you can save your life when an enemy gets the upper hand.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/applecomputer/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/appolicious_rss/rss_appolicious_tc/http___www_appolicious_com_articles10288_fresh_iphone_apps_for_nov_23_macys_thanksgiving_day_parade_salelocator_major_mayhem_blood_glory/43692836/SIG=14gd224ho/*http%3A//www.appolicious.com/tech/articles/10288-fresh-iphone-apps-for-nov-23-macys-thanksgiving-day-parade-salelocator-major-mayhem-blood-glory

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