Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Half-plant, half-predator, all-weird

Still on my honeymoon, far away from any form of internet, so this is another old post from my previous blog. The post itself is not one of the best I?ve written, but the subject matter was so fascinating I feel it needed reposting!

This post came to light due to?Captain Skellet (whose been around SciAm?lately!) alerting me to?Hatena. I?ve heard of several organisms containing proto-plasmids; symbiotic chloroplasts which haven?t completely been endosymbiosed, but the strange?life-cycle?of ?the protist Hatena was a new one so I went to look it up. And I?m very glad I did, because it?s pretty amazing.

Hatena

Hatena, taken from the reference (link below).

The picture above shows a micrograph of Hatena. The green blob is the symbiont living inside it and the scale bar is 10um. As a quick point of background information?chloroplasts are the little membrane enclosed vesicles in plants which carry out photosynthesis. The current theory for how they developed is that they were once free-living bacterial type organisms (cyanobacteria) which were engulfed by a larger cell and over time lost their own identity to become photosynthesising factories inside the larger cell.

Hatena arenicola doesn?t have a chloroplast, but it does have a symbiotic relationship with another organism;?nephroselmis.?The?nephroselmis is always found in the same place in the Hatena, and carries out photosynthesis to provide energy for both of them. Unlike regular chloroplasts,?nephroselmis has its own proper nucleus and even its own mitochondria although most of the internal cellular organisation and any kind of motile apparatus (such as flagella) has been lost. Nephroselmis is a sort of half-symbiont, with enough of it?s own machinery to be a clearly distinct organism, but once it gets inside its host organism, it?s happy to stay there and mutually benefit the both of them.

The weirdest thing about these two organisms though, is their replication cycles. When Hatena replicates, the?nephroselmis doesn?t, and as a result only one of the offspring gets the photosynthesising symbiont. The other organism remains colourless and develops a complex feeding apparatus at the apex of the cell, presumably as it can no longer rely on the symbiont for food. This wierd ?half plant, half predator? lifecycle is shown below. (Picture taken from the reference, scale bar 10um):

The replicating life-cycle of Hatena. Ref link below.

That?s just weird. Seriously odd. The?Hatena?is able to move seemingly freely between being a predator consuming other cells for food, and being a plant-like organism once it settles down with its symbiotic partner. The grey non-symbiont organisms can be induced to take up free-moving nephroselmis and (in the words of the paper) ?tentitavely? maintain a symbiotic relationship with them but it also seems perfectly happy to survive on its own.

The paper suggests that?Hatena?cycles between these two modes of living, depending on circumstance. Thus the ?predator? grey cell shown above will continue eating fellow cells until it consumes a?nephroselmis, at which point it degrades its complex feeding apparatus, accepts energy from the symbiont until it?s ready to divide. One of the daughter cells will then go through the whole cycle again while the other remains as a non-predating plant. The authors freely admit that there is little evidence for much of these stages, but it seems a reasonable way to explain what is going on.

As this is clearly a very early stage in symbiotic capture it has important implications for the endosymbiotic theory of chloroplast evolution. Along with various other ?intermediate? symbionts (such as?Karenia mikimotoi and?Lepidodinium viride) the?Hatena helps to show how chloroplasts might have first formed in the cellular ancestor of plants.?Hatena and its symbiont have already acquired an intimate structural association, only the coordination of their cell cycles would be required to turn the nephroselmis into an internally replicating plastid.

?

Ref:?OKAMOTO, N., & INOUYE, I. (2006). Hatena arenicola gen. et sp. nov., a Katablepharid Undergoing Probable Plastid Acquisition Protist, 157 (4), 401-419 DOI: 10.1016/j.protis.2006.05.011

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=f54b378216014d22cefea294dcc1ec83

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Monday, January 23, 2012

Lawmakers moving to tighten screws on Iran (Reuters)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) ? The Senate is looking to strengthen the economic chokehold on Iran with even stricter measures to cripple Tehran's oil revenues and possibly its shipping in legislation that is expected in the coming weeks.

Lawmakers want to move quickly to constrict the funding that Western nations suspect Iran is using to develop nuclear weapons.

The sanctions, still in draft form, would follow legislation passed in December and seek to capitalize on moves by the European Union toward an Iranian oil embargo and sanctions against Iran's central bank.

Details may be unveiled in the Senate Banking Committee as early as next week after members return to Washington from a winter recess. But action could slip into February, Capitol Hill aides told Reuters.

One congressional aide said senators were discussing provisions that would make President Barack Obama decide whether to blacklist Iran's oil tanker operator, the National Iranian Tanker Company (NITC), and the National Iranian Oil Company (NIOC).

The idea is to give Obama a deadline to determine whether Tehran's tanker operator and oil company have any links to Iran's Revolutionary Guards Corps.

The congressional aide, who asked not to be named, said the time frame for the president to make a decision would be around 60 days so the administration "can't sit on it. They would have to make a determination."

Another lawmaker's aide said the bill being drafted may include measures that would sanction foreign entities that buy oil from affiliates of Iran's Revolutionary Guards Corps.

A committee aide confirmed that the banking panel's chairman, Democrat Tim Johnson, was working on a bipartisan Iran sanctions bill with the ranking Republican, Richard Shelby. Committee aides declined to provide details.

DELICATE BALANCE

The proposed measures come as the Obama administration struggles to implement sanctions on foreign banks handling Iranian oil transactions that became law on December 31.

The challenge for the administration, with an eye toward the November elections, will be to implement the rules without driving oil prices higher and hurting the fragile U.S. economy.

Senators Robert Menendez and Mark Kirk warned Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner this week that they would be watching closely to make sure countries were not allowed to escape financial sanctions.

A Treasury Department official declined comment on actions the U.S. government may or may not take.

"The NITC and NIOC already fall under U.S. sanctions and we continue to work with the international community to further increase the pressure on Iran to deepen the impact through the application of appropriate sanctions and calibrated efforts to reduce Iran's oil revenues," the Treasury official said.

The new sanctions package could include some tweaks to the law passed late last year, one Capitol Hill aide said.

BIPARTISAN POPULARITY

Bills slapping new sanctions on Iran attracted broad support in the Senate and House of Representatives last year, making it one of the few issues to sail through the otherwise gridlocked U.S. Congress.

On December 14, the House passed legislation similar to what is now being readied in the Senate, expanding oil-related sanctions on Iran and closing loopholes.

"We just need to pass this bill, we passed it in the House overwhelmingly," Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, who led House efforts on the sanctions, told reporters this week. Some of the Senate provisions were introduced months ago but have not seen action, she noted.

The bill emerging in the Senate Banking Committee is expected to have in play provisions requiring foreign companies to disclose business done with Iran in their mandatory filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

That provision, as well as sanctions on foreign companies that buy oil from Revolutionary Guards Corps affiliates, was part of a Senate bill first introduced by Menendez in May 2011.

SOME MEASURES MAY BE LEFT FOR LATER

Senators continue to mull how to deal with ideas that may be out of the Banking Committee's jurisdiction, such as some affecting shipping. Those items could be acted on at a later point in the legislative process, aides said.

An aide to Senator Kirsten Gillibrand said the New York lawmaker hopes to include some sanctions on Syria. Those sanctions may be viewed as connected to the Iranian issues because of Syria's close ties to Tehran, the aide said.

Sanctions on shipping companies that have visited Iran, North Korea or Syria in the previous 180 days - a measure originally included in the Menendez bill and expanded upon in the House-passed legislation - may be out of the Banking Committee's jurisdiction, two Senate aides said.

Also beyond the scope of the banking bill may be a package of human rights sanctions on foreign companies that sell "tools of oppression" to Iran - items used to kill, torture or oppress citizens.

Congress is also considering measures that would see the U.S. government ban shipping classification societies from providing services to vessels in the United States if they also provide those services to vessels for Iran, North Korea, Sudan or Syria.

Without certification by a classification society, shippers would find it difficult to get insurance or enter major ports.

In November the Senate Commerce Committee approved the measure, introduced by Susan Collins, Joe Lieberman and Mark Begich, as part of a Coast Guard bill. It could be voted on by the Senate in coming months, a Senate aide said.

(Additional reporting by Susan Cornwell; Editing by Russell Blinch)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/iran/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120121/pl_nm/us_usa_iran_sanctions

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Sunday, January 22, 2012

Meet the super super PAC (Politico)

Super PACs are just so 2011.

Meet the next big thing in U.S. politics: the super super PAC.

Continue Reading

South Carolina Primary Live Coverage

These nascent groups can not only raise mega cash to promote candidates, but give money to candidates? campaigns ? a kind of political power and intimacy today?s super PACs alone can?t achieve.

Here?s how it works: under new federal rules, a traditional PAC and super PAC may operate under one roof. These hybrid operations can raise and spend unlimited amounts of cash to promote or oppose candidates, as any super PAC can, while simultaneously giving limited amounts of money directly to campaigns and committees, like a traditional political action committee.

Already, 11 of these hybrids have emerged, representing a range of political ideologies and purposes. They foreshadow even further tumult within the nation?s campaign finance system as the two-year anniversary of the seminal Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission decision arrives Saturday.

Several operatives involved with them predict the popularity of special interest hybrid PACs will explode during the next year as more organizations become aware of them and realize their benefits.

?Any PAC that doesn?t become a hybrid PAC is run by idiots. The default is going to be hybrid PACs,? said Dan Backer, the principal attorney at DB Capitol Strategies who successfully argued last year?s Carey v. Federal Election Commission case, the decision in which legalized hybrid PACs for those not tied to corporations and unions.

?It?d be ludicrous to limit your ability when you have this right,? he said. ?My thought is that we?ll never say ?super PAC? again in 10, maybe five years.?

PACs connected to corporations and unions, meanwhile, could soon win the same right, thanks to a case also initiated by Backer and pending before the Federal Election Commission. It?s expected to be settled by late winter.

Two major super PACs, both of which have poured millions of dollars into this year?s presidential campaign, confirm to POLITICO they?re considering morphing into hybrid PACs.

?If Newt Gingrich gets the nomination, we would want a very strong ticket up and down the line, and this would definitely help in that regard, giving us the ability to donate direct to candidates,? said Rick Tyler, an official at pro-Gingrich super PAC Winning Our Future, which to date has spent several million dollars promoting the House speaker or attacking his opponents. ?We?re not going to leave any weapon in the the arsenal.?

Said Abe Niederhauser, treasurer of the pro-Ron Paul Endorse Liberty super PAC: ?It seems like a big advantage. I?d be interested in learning more about it. We might want to do it.?

For PACs that have already gone hybrid ? they range from the Conservative Action Fund to the Gay and Lesbian Victory Fund ? the advantages are notable and immediate, several officials said.

One likened it to the difference between paying high home utility bills issued by several different companies versus paying one bill from single provider who bundles services together for a lower overall rate.

?It really makes it a lot easier to organize your efforts and fundraise. You?re looking at a 30, 40, 50 percent savings on overhead costs and administration alone,? said Dave Mason, a two-time FEC chairman who helped create PURO PAC, a hybrid formed last month to advocate for the premium cigar industry and support candidates who oppose federal cigar regulations. ?You can put that savings into politics, like ads or contributions. And for traditional PACs, it?s going to contribute to pushing their activity in the direction of more independent expenditures ? and I?m not saying whether that?s good or bad.?

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/politico_rss/rss_politico_mostpop/http___www_politico_com_news_stories0112_71763_html/44256069/SIG=11megi108/*http%3A//www.politico.com/news/stories/0112/71763.html

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Saturday, January 21, 2012

MegaUpload owner found hiding in safe room with sawed-off shotgun (Digital Trends)

kim-dotcom

Since the closure of file-sharing site?MegaUpload and the following?Anonymous?attack on federal and music industry sites, details regarding the arrest of MegaUpload?founder?Kim ?Dotcom? Schmitz have been made public. German national, 38-year-old?Schmitz was spending the day in his?country mansion hideaway when?dozens of police officers with helicopters swarmed the home. Schmitz then engaged several electronic locks throughout the household and refused to allow police entry into the?$23 million mansion in Coatesville, New Zealand. As police officers forced their way into the home,?Schmitz barricaded himself in the mansion?s safe room. After police sliced through the safe room door, they found him next to a sawed-off shotgun.?

mafia-carSchmitz was taken into custody without any further incident while police officers continued to search the property. Within?New Zealand, police seized approximately 18 luxury vehicles worth?4.8 million dollars including several Mercedes Benz automobiles,?a 2012 Maserati, a 2008?Rolls-Royce Phantom Drophead Coupe and?a 1959 pink Cadillac. License plates on the cars included words such as ?GOD?, ?MAFIA?, ?STONED?, ?CEO?,?GOOD? & ?EVIL?, ?HACKER? and ?CEO.? Police also seized artwork and electronic equipment as well as approximately eight million dollars from his bank accounts located within New Zealand. On a global scale, twenty search warrants were executed by various countries including the United States and approximately $50 million in assets have been seized so far.?

In addition to leasing the most expensive home in New Zealand,?Schmitz was known for extravagant spending within the country. In 2011, he spent approximately half a million dollars on a?New Year?s Eve fireworks display?to celebrate his family?s residency. According to?Internet security expert?Jeffrey Carr,?Schmitz and his family settled down?in the country because ?New Zealand is under the radar, away from Interpol and a better lifestyle than Eastern Europe.??

kimdotcom-arrestedSchmitz currently faces up to twenty years in prison?on charges including conspiracy to commit copyright infringement, criminal copyright infringement, conspiracy to commit money laundering?and?racketeering.?Schmitz and other MegaUpload?employees arrested in the case have also been denied bail. However, this hasn?t been?Schmitz?s first encounter with police and federal authorities. In 1994, Schmitz spent three months in a?Munich jail for accessing?Pentagon computers to view?real-time satellite photos of Saddam Hussein?s palaces in Iraq.?During 1998,?Schmitz received a?two-year suspended prison sentence for hacking charges related to?theft of trade secrets as well as?tens of thousands of pounds ripped off from banks and security company using stolen phone card numbers.?

Following that prosecution,?Schmitz founded?a computer security company called?Data Protect and sold his ownership in the company for millions before the dot-com bubble burst in 2000. He took that money and invested in a failing shopping site called Letsbuyit.com. He also?publicly?announced a heavy investment in the firm, but that claim was designed to inflate the stock?s value. He ended up selling his stock shortly after the announcement for a profit of over a million dollars. After extraditing?Schmitz from Bangkok, Thailand,?German authorities prosecuted Schmitz again in 2002 for insider trading related to Letsbuyit.com, but he received another suspended prison sentence after spending five months in jail waiting?for his trial.

In 2005,?Schmitz founded MegaUpload and watched it grow to garner?150 million registered users and approximately 50 million visitors a day. The site allowed users to upload video and music and create links to download those files. There?s no search function included in the site, this Schmitz relied on users to publish the links. While?Schmitz often flaunted his?extravagant?taste on YouTube with videos racing expensive cars or lounging with?bikini-clad models on yachts, German newspapers didn?t bring more attention to his lifestyle and link to MegaUpload until last year.

The three other men arrested in the New Zealand raid include 38-year-old, German citizen Finn Batato, 40-year-old,?German citizen?Mathias Ortmann and 29-year-old, Dutch citizen?Bram van der Kolk. On Monday, extradition proceedings will continue in New Zealand.

This article was originally posted on Digital Trends

More from Digital Trends

Google closing Picnik, along with a number of other services

14 free MegaUpload alternatives

Google?s all-or-nothing plan to make you a Google+ user

SOPA stopped: Chief sponsor delays action indefinitely

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/digitalmusic/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/digitaltrends/20120121/tc_digitaltrends/megauploadownerfoundhidinginsaferoomwithsawedoffshotgun

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Obama to press Congress to revisit $1.2T in cuts

(AP) ? In its budget submission next month, the Obama administration will urge lawmakers to revisit the failed attempt by a congressional supercommittee to cut the deficit by at least $1.2 trillion, the White House says.

The proposal runs counter to the common wisdom in Washington that any major deficit reduction effort is unlikely in a presidential election year. Instead, lawmakers are focusing on a one-year extension of a payroll tax cut and supplemental jobless benefits sought by the president as part of last fall's jobs agenda.

But also looming are sweeping across-the-board spending cuts required next year because of the supercommittee deadlock. Top lawmakers like House Armed Services Committee Chairman Howard "Buck" McKeon, R-Calif., are focusing on a less ambitious one-year plan to give the Pentagon a reprieve from cuts that both the administration and Republicans say would cripple the military.

The White House plan, likely to reprise new taxes and fee proposals that are nonstarters with Capitol Hill Republicans, would turn off the entire nine-year, $1.2 trillion across-the-board spending cuts, referred to as a "sequester."

"We have a sequester coming less than a year from now unless Congress acts," said a senior administration official. "We're going to ask Congress to do now what we think Congress should have done in December, which is enact more than $1.2 trillion in deficit reduction, turn off the sequester and maintain the (spending caps)."

The official required anonymity as a condition to speak to a reporter on the plan.

That plan of budget cuts would be imposed under last summer's budget and debt pact between Obama and Congress that imposed $900 billion in savings from accounts appropriated by Congress each year and promised at least $1.2 trillion more from the work on the deficit supercommittee, or, failing that, across-the-board cuts to a sweeping set of defense and domestic programs.

The threat of the across-the-board cuts was supposed to prod the panel, but it never got on track and collapsed just before Thanksgiving over intractable differences on tax increases and cuts to popular programs like Medicare.

The failure of the panel capped a long, difficult budget year in which the warring sides were only able to agree when facing either a shutdown of the government or an unthinkable default on U.S. obligations. Policymakers face the prospect of more gridlock this year as election-year politics promise to even further cripple the already limited ability of Obama and Capitol Hill Republicans to work together.

In that light, the administration's proposal could be doomed to dead-on-arrival status despite widespread desire to turn off the automatic cuts

At the same time, a new wrinkle has emerged due to the collapse of the supercommittee: a new set of spending caps for the 2013 budget year that begins Oct. 1 that require cuts of about $8 billion from the $554 billion budget for defense programs, the first outright cuts since the so-called peace dividend of the early 1990s.

The required defense cuts are separate from those that would be imposed under the sequester, but the administration official predicted lawmakers might revisit them when turning to the annual appropriations bills later this year.

The budget is slated to be released Feb. 6.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-01-20-US-Obama-Budget/id-8f2c11eb2a4348379cd7942ce1869bc4

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Friday, January 20, 2012

[OOC] There Goes the Neighborhood

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This forum is for OOC discussion about existing roleplays.

Please post all "Players Wanted" threads in the Roleplayers Wanted forum!

This topic is an Out Of Character part of the roleplay, ?There Goes the Neighborhood?. Anything posted here will also show up there.

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Forum for completely Out of Character (OOC) discussion, based around whatever is happening In Character (IC). Discuss plans, storylines, and events; Recruit for your roleplaying game, or find a GM for your playergroup.


I'm working on a character for the ghost right now, but it might take me a while. I dont want to rush it and have a bunch of spelling errors and mistakes in it. But you can probably expect it sometime today if not sometime later in the night.

User avatar
littlebirddogmint
Member for 1 years


That's fine, I wanted to encourage people not to rush into writing a profile and to take their time.

User avatar
VitaminHeart
Member for 2 years


I've posted Freddie but if you'd prefer littlebirddogmint (what a name, by the way) for the role of ghost, I can probably conjure up something for the vampire instead...

The Murmuration
mur?mur?a?tion
?noun
1. an act or instance of murmuring.
2. a flock of starlings.

Origin:
1350?1400; Middle English < Latin murmur?ti?n- (stem of murmur?ti? ).

User avatar
NorthernSoul
Member for 5 years



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Jon Stewart, Dramatic Chipmunk call out congressional nerd bashing

By Helen A.S. Popkin

"A series of tubes" is how then-Sen. Ted Stevens (R-Alaska) described the Internet in 2006 while defending his anti-neutrality position, and it seems not a whole lot has changed up on Capitol Hill since then.

Six years later, at least half a dozen congressmen referred to?those?who actually understand the global system of?computer networks connected by?the standard?Internet protocol suite as "nerds." This smart people-bashing took place during discussions of the nerd-hated Stop Online Privacy Act currently before Congress. ?

Jon Stewart shared a montage of left-handed congressional compliments on Wednesday's "Daily Show" in a piece about?the day's Internet blackout by websites protesting the bill. He even brought Dramatic Chipmunk ? aka Dramatic Prairie Dog ??to help, and included a montage revealing how "stealing" copyrighted content can age even a host of a fake news TV show.

More on the annoying way we live now:?

Helen A.S. Popkin goes blah blah blah about the Internet ? at least until the Stop Online Piracy Act becomes a law, making snark a libelous felony. Tell her to get a real job on Twitter and/or Facebook. Also, Google+.

Source: http://technolog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/01/19/10190893-jon-stewart-dramatic-gopher-call-out-congressional-nerd-bashing

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Thursday, January 19, 2012

Top Official tells AP Kim Jong Un is ready to lead (AP)

PYONGYANG, North Korea ? A senior North Korean party official dismissed concerns about Kim Jong Un's readiness to lead, saying he spent years working closely with his late father and helped him make key policy decisions on the economy as well as military affairs.

In the first high-level interview with foreign journalists since Kim Jong Il's Dec. 17 death, Politburo member and Kim family confidante Yang Hyong Sop told The Associated Press that North Koreans were in good hands with their young new leader. He emphasized an unbroken continuity from father to son that suggests a continuation of Kim Jong Il's key policies.

"We suffered the greatest loss in the history of our nation as a result of the sudden, unexpected and tragic loss of the Great Leader Kim Jong Il," he said in the interview Monday at Mansudae Assembly Hall, seat of the North Korean legislative body.

"But still, we are not worried a bit," he added, "because we know that we are being led by Comrade Kim Jong Un, who is fully prepared to carry on the heritage created by the Great Gen. Kim Jong Il."

Daily life in this cold, somber capital has begun to return to normal one month after Kim's death, reportedly from a heart attack while riding on his private train.

The white mourning bouquets and massive portraits of the departed leader have been cleared from Pyongyang's main buildings and monuments. People are busy getting back to daily life, with children whizzing down icy slopes on wooden sleds and workers running to catch morning buses and trams as the Kim Jong Un ode "Footsteps" blares over loudspeakers.

Vast Kim Il Sung Square, where a sea of mourners converged after Kim's death, was ghostly quiet except for a few people who scurried quickly across the frigid plaza.

In recent weeks, as North Koreans filled the capital's streets with their emotive mourning and the government staged elaborate funeral proceedings, party and military officials moved quickly to install Kim's son as "supreme leader" of the people, party and military.

Kim Jong Un had been kept out of the public eye for most of his life before suddenly emerging as his father's heir only in September 2010. Though still in his 20s, he was quickly promoted to four-star general and named a vice chairman of the Central Military Commission of the Workers' Party of Korea.

But the new ruler's youth and quick ascension to power have raised questions in foreign capitals about how ready he is to inherit rule over this nation of 24 million with a nuclear program as well chronic trouble feeding all its people.

Yang said he had no concerns about Kim's ability to lead.

"The Respected Comrade Kim Jong Un had long assisted the Great General Kim Jong Il," he told AP. "It's not a secret that he has helped the great general in many different aspects ? not only in military affairs but also the economy and other areas as well."

A soft-spoken octogenarian who is vice president of the Presidium of the Supreme People's Assembly and a standing member of the powerful Political Bureau of the party's Central Committee, Yang has long-standing ties with the Kim family that stretch back to his close alliance with the nation's founder, Kim Il Sung.

During a 2010 interview with Associated Press Television News in Pyongyang, he provided the first confirmation by a government official that Kim Jong Un would eventually become the nation's next leader.

"He knows what the exact intention of the Great Gen. Kim Jong Il was," he said Monday.

His comments this week indicated there would be little change to major policies laid out by Kim Jong Un's father in the three years before his death. Yang said the new leader was focused on a "knowledge-based" economy and looking at economic reforms enacted by other nations, including China.

The North has increasingly looked to China for guidance on how to revitalize its moribund economy, particularly as South Korea, Japan and other nations have frozen trade and aid to the North amid concerns about its nuclear ambitions.

Little is known about Kim Jong Un's background and experience, though North Koreans have been told he studied at Kim Il Sung Military University and was involved in military operations such as the November 2010 artillery attack on a South Korean island that killed four South Koreans.

Earlier this month, North Korea's state-run broadcaster aired a documentary about the new leader that began filling in some blanks prior to his public debut.

The footage shows him observing the April 2009 launch of a long-range rocket and quotes him threatening to wage war against any nation attempting to intercept the rocket, which North Korea claimed was carrying a communications satellite but the United States, South Korea and Japan say was really a test of its long-range missile technology.

It was the first indication of his involvement in that controversial launch.

Yet even if Kim Jong Un was playing a prominent behind-the-scenes role prior to 2010, his training period would have been much shorter than that of his Kim Jong Il, who spent 20 years working under his own father, Kim Il Sung.

After his father's death, Kim Jong Il observed a three-year mourning period before formally assuming leadership.

"Kim Jong Il had the benefit of time. He had 20 years to grow a cult of personality around him," said Cheong Seong-chang, an expert on North Korean affairs at the private Sejong Institute in South Korea. "Kim Jong Un had only two to three years at the most ... so authorities are now hurrying their propaganda efforts."

___

Associated Press writer Sam Kim contributed to this report from Seoul, South Korea. Follow AP's new Pyongyang Bureau Chief Jean H. Lee at twitter.com/newsjean and Chief Asia Photographer David Guttenfelder at twitter.com/dguttenfelder.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/un/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120117/ap_on_re_as/as_nkorea_kim_jong_un

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Fake iPad 2 made from clay sold in Canada


Fake iPad 2 made from clay sold in Canada

As many as 10 fake iPad 2s made of clay may have been bought by unwitting Canadians, according to a report.

The CTV News website claims that Future Shop and Best Buy have launched an investigation after the fake devices were sold in their stores in Vancouver.?


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Apparently scammers had bought real iPads from the stores - paying by cash - removed them from their packaging and replaced them with modelling clay. After re-sealing the packaging they returned the boxes and got a refund.

The boxes full of clay were apparently then put straight back on to the shelves and sold to unsuspecting customers.?

"Customers don't expect to receive this kind of product from Future Shop, so it's a very serious matter and something we are addressing right away for anyone who has been impacted," a Future Shop spokesman told CTV.

One man who bought one of the clay-filled boxes said he was treated like a criminal when he tried to return the box. He contacted the retailer's head office, Apple and local police but it was only when he contaced CTV that he was taken seriously. He received an apology, a full refund and a real iPad 2 as compensation, according to the report.

Source: http://rss.feedsportal.com/c/432/f/530793/s/1becf3f3/l/0L0Scomputerworlduk0N0Cnews0Cmobile0Ewireless0C3330A8110Cfake0Eipad0E20Emade0Efrom0Eclay0Esold0Ein0Ecanada0C0Dolo0Frss/story01.htm

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Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Ireland's former richest person declared bankrupt

(AP) ? A famed entrepreneur who was once rated Ireland's richest person was declared bankrupt on Monday in a Dublin court as a bank pursues him for debts exceeding euro2.1 billion ($2.7 billion).

Lawyers for tycoon Sean Quinn withdrew his opposition to a bankruptcy order sought by the former Anglo Irish Bank, the reckless lender at the center of Ireland's calamitous property crash.

The bankruptcy will force a thorough investigation of Quinn's finances, which the bank hopes will reveal capital and assets that it can reclaim from Quinn, his wife and five children.

Quinn had a reported 2007 net worth of euro4.7 billion ($6 billion) but sank much of his fortune into Anglo shortly before the bank ? the most aggressive lender to Ireland's construction barons ? suffered crippling losses as the country's decade-long property bubble burst.

The Quinn family in 2008 secretly built up to a 28 percent stake in Anglo shares using an ill-regulated financial instrument that hid the scale of their investment from other stockholders. As Anglo's share price plunged, the bank allegedly encouraged Quinn and his relatives to borrow hundreds of millions specifically to buy more Anglo stock.

Ireland nationalized Anglo in 2009 to prevent its collapse, wiping out a Quinn family investment estimated at euro2.8 billion. The government last year renamed Anglo as the Irish Bank Resolution Corp., or IBRC. Its bailout is expected to cost taxpayers euro29 billion, a bill so great it overwhelmed Ireland's finances and forced the government last year to negotiate a humiliating loan pact with the European Union and International Monetary Fund.

Quinn, 64, was not in Ireland's Commercial Court to hear Monday's judgment by Justice Elizabeth Dunne. She told lawyer Gavin Simons that Quinn would have to provide documents showing how much he's worth today.

Last week Quinn lost a Belfast legal battle to gain bankruptcy protection in the neighboring British territory of Northern Ireland. The judge there ruled that Quinn had misled an earlier Belfast judge that his main base of business was in Northern Ireland, rather than the Republic of Ireland.

"I never done a day's work from southern Ireland in my life," Quinn insisted to reporters outside the Belfast court last week.

Dublin-based IBRC would have faced greater difficulty pursuing Quinn for debts in Northern Ireland. Quinn also could have returned to business within a year under UK bankruptcy law, whereas the Irish prevent bankrupts from holding company directorships for up to 12 years.

As part of his overturned Belfast bankruptcy bid, Quinn in November testified he had less than euro11,000 ($15,000) in cash in three bank accounts to pay off IBRC debt demands of euro2.16 billion ($2.75 billion).

The Quinns and IBRC are locked in several legal battles stretching from the British Virgin Islands to Cyprus over control of a commercial property empire spanning Britain, Russia, Ukraine, Turkey and India valued at more than euro700 million.

The bank accuses Quinn of fraudulently shifting ownership of his foreign properties, including office blocks and shopping malls, to relatives and shell companies that remain under the Quinns' surreptitious control. The Quinns deny these charges.

His five children have filed a Dublin lawsuit against IBRC seeking to have the bulk of the family's Anglo borrowing voided on the grounds that the bank should never have lent them the money in the first place.

Their lawsuit argues that Anglo misled them about the company's imminent danger of collapse and spurred them to commit market fraud by manipulating Anglo's share price. IBRC insists Anglo's loans to the Quinns were for much wider business reasons.

Quinn boasts one of Ireland's most famous rags-to-riches stories. He grew up on a border farm in Northern Ireland's County Fermanagh, left school barely literate at 14 and started his first construction-gravel business with a 100-pound ($150) bank loan.

Within three decades Quinn had transformed his quarry into a nationwide cement company. He built and bought luxury hotels, pubs, apartment complexes and commercial properties throughout Ireland, Britain, Eastern Europe and Asia; founded Ireland's third-largest insurance company; and took interests in glassworks, packaging and radiators.

IBRC last year seized ownership of his Irish-based Quinn Group, forced him and relatives off the board, and sold a majority stake in his insurance company to U.S. insurance company Liberty Mutual.

___

Online:

Irish Bank Resolution Corp., http://www.ibrc.ie/

Quinn's empire, http://www.quinn-group.com/

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-01-16-EU-Ireland-Bankrupt-Tycoon/id-38c9d46f3d1848f482a2c7eba321d178

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Apple patents clothes that track how you wear them, tell you when it's time to update your wardrobe

There's a huge problem with working out that has yet to be solved: when, precisely, do our workout clothes become too worn to wear anymore? Apple knows we can't be wasting endless minutes looking for holes and tears in our shirts and pants, so it's just obtained a method patent to let you know when your gear is past its prime. The patent claims sensor-equipped garments that can track how you use them, report that info back to a central database and alert you when the clothing has reached "its expected useful lifetime." (Read: it's time to buy some new, undoubtedly more expensive gym clothes.) This latest bit of IP doesn't just cover clothing either, Cupertino's claiming the same method for running shoes, too. The footwear bit also provides real-time feedback that compares your current running style to an established profile to keep your workouts consistent -- useful feature, that, though we can't imagine such iShoes would make the folks in Niketown too happy. We're not sure how Apple aims to make the needed wearables equipped with embedded electronics, but we can offer you plenty of typically broad patent legalese explaining the system that'll get you buying them at the source below.

Apple patents clothes that track how you wear them, tell you when it's time to update your wardrobe originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 Jan 2012 16:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/U3IQWhi5aKE/

conrad murray

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Will Android be the death of PCs?

Horace Dediu/Jeremy Reimer/Asymco

History of computer platforms

By Athima Chansanchai

In a viewpoint the author admits is "extremist," an industry analyst believes that if iOS and Android devices are considered to be substitutes for personal computers, then not only is the latter's market share going to dip below 50 percent, but collapse is also imminent.

Finland-based?Horace Dediu, who runs Asymco, which on LinkedIn is self-described as "a company selling software development and consulting services for companies interested in deploying mobile applications," published a blog post today?that might make some people's heads explode?? particularly those of us without a penchant for numbers. In that post, he charts "The rise and fall of personal computing," which compares PCs to Macs, iOS and Android devices in shipped units and market share.

In his last graph, Dediu talks about the integration of smartphones into the personal computing space.

I will concede that this last view is extremist. It does not reflect a competition that exists in real life. However, I put this data together to show a historic pattern. Sometimes extremism is a better point of view than conservatism. Ignoring this view is very harmful as these not-good-enough computers will surely get better. A competitor that has no strategy to deal with this shift is likely to suffer the fate of those companies in the left side of the chart. Treating the first share chart as reality is surely much more dangerous than contemplating the third.

Horace Dediu/Asymco

Market share, with data from Gartner and IDC

As the commenters below the post note, there is no inclusion of Nokia's Symbian or Research in Motion's BlackBerry; but in a world that seems increasingly skewed toward Android and iOS, Dediu looks like he's already made the leap.?

As he puts it:

The ?entrants? into personal computing, the iPad, iPhone and Android, have a combined volume that is higher than the PCs sold in the same period (358 million estimated iOS+Android vs. 336 million PCs excluding Macs in 2011.) The growth rate and the scale itself combine to make the entrants impossible to ignore.

Live Poll

Do you spend more time on your smartphone or your personal computer?

  • 173604

    Smartphone. I can do everything on it, and it's with me all the time.

    22%

  • 173605

    PC/Mac/other. I have a smartphone, but it won't be replacing my home/laptop anytime soon.

    78%

VoteTotal Votes: 2006

We've seen the addition of iPhones supplementing Macs and PCs at home, and Chromebooks arriving after Android handsets. We've also seen the rapid rise of Android, how its handsets have overtaken the iPhone in the U.S., and how its apps in the Android Market will close in on Apple's, but have we arrived at that moment when smartphones replace the personal computer? Take our poll and let us know where you're at.

More stories:

Check out Technolog on?Facebook, and on Twitter, follow?Athima Chansanchai, who is also trying to keep her head above water in the?Google+?stream.

Source: http://technolog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/01/17/10173984-will-android-be-the-death-of-pcs

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Pakistan police: Bomb kills 13 at Shiite march (AP)

MULTAN, Pakistan ? A bomb blast ripped through a religious procession in eastern Pakistan on Sunday, killing 13 people and wounding at least 20 in the latest sectarian attack in the volatile country, police said.

Hundreds of Pakistani Shiites had gathered in the town of Khanpur in Punjab province for a traditional procession to mark the end of 40 days of mourning following the anniversary of the death of Imam Hussein, a revered seventh-century figure.

The explosion went off as the mourners came out of a mosque, said District Police Chief Sohail Chatta. The bomb appeared to have been planted ahead of time in the path of the procession, he said.

No one immediately claimed responsibility for the attack.

The Pakistani Taliban and other Sunni extremist groups have in the past claimed responsibility for the bombings of Shiite religious sites and ceremonies. Many Sunni extremists in Pakistan regard Shiites as heretics.

The Taliban and other groups have carried out hundreds of bombings over the last five years that have killed thousands of Pakistani troops and civilians as part of a campaign to install a hard-line Islamist government.

The attacks are so common that the country's interior minister in December actually thanked the Taliban for acting on what he said was a "request" not to stage attacks during the Shiite rituals of Ashoura that month.

Police officer Ghazanfer Ali said the crowd of mourners started throwing rocks at police after the blast. and officers had to lob tear gas canisters into the crowd to control them.

Officials had originally thought the explosion came from a malfunctioning electric cable, but later found that there had been a bomb, he said.

Punjab law minister Rana Sanaullah said police investigators were still examining the area for clues. Security had been provided for the procession, but it had been breached, Sanaullah said.

The continuing strikes by presumed religious extremists come amid a political crisis that pits the Pakistani civilian government against the military, and which has sparked rumors of an impending coup.

Last week the military warned the government of possible "grievous consequences" ahead and Zardari took a one-day trip to Dubai that renewed speculation that he might flee the country.

Analysts say the military may be looking for the Supreme Court to push out President Asif Ali Zardari rather than risk an outright takeover.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120115/ap_on_re_as/as_pakistan

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Golden Globes Led By George Clooney, 'The Artist'

Host Ricky Gervais returns, as 'Modern Family,' Michelle Williams and Meryl Streep also toke home statues on Sunday night.
By Ryan J. Downey


George Clooney onstage at the 2012 Golden Globes
Photo: Paul Drinkwater/NBC/Getty Images

On Sunday night (January 15), George Clooney and "The Artist" continued their awards-season domination while Ricky Gervais giddily piled on the humiliation as the 69th annual Golden Globes went down in Hollywood.

The returning host kept his most pointed barbs confined to the monologue, while the Hollywood Foreign Press Association spread the love a bit more evenly than some predicted, with Globes for stars like Meryl Streep and Michelle Williams. Expected winners also took home statues, with Clooney nabbing Best Actor and "The Artist" winning Best Motion Picture - Comedy or Musical; the actor and film, like Best Supporting Actor Christopher Plummer and Best Supporting Actress Octavia Spencer have been cleaning up this month.

"Cheers. So, where was I?" Gervais began, in an appropriately devilish red suit.

The awards show itself was the comedian's first major target ("the Golden Globes are to the Oscars what Kim Kardashian is to Kate Middleton"), followed by the Oscars ("when the man who said 'yes' to 'Norbit,' says 'no' to you, you know you're in trouble"), the HFPA, Jodie Foster (Elton John looked unimpressed), Kim Kardashian ("I've sat through longer James Cameron acceptance speeches than [her marriage]"), Justin Bieber ("the only way that he could have impregnated a girl is if he borrowed one of Martha Stewart's old turkey basters") and more.

Gervais introduced the first presenter of the night, Johnny Depp, with a plug for his own forthcoming HBO series, "Life's Too Short," which in one episode's fit of "meta" casting features Depp as himself grilling Gervais about last year's Golden Globes. Depp sipped from Gervais' glass of beer before the comedian asked him if he'd seen "The Tourist" yet. "No," Depp responded, as he stifled a laugh. (Depp went on to introduce a short clip about Martin Scorsese's 3-D picture "Hugo," which was nominated for Best Motion Picture - Drama.)

Gerard Butler and Mila Kunis presented the award for Best Supporting Actor to Plummer for his role as a gay man who comes out late in life in "Beginners."

"What a wonderful welcome back to the home of King Kong, Rin-Tin Tin and all our youthful fantasies," the 82-year-old screen legend said. "I must praise my distinguished competitors for whom I have the greatest admiration and to whom I apologize most profusely. And I want to salute my partner, Ewan, that wily Scot; Ewan 'My Heart's in the Highlands' McGregor." His last bit of thanks was reserved for his wife of 43 years, Elaine. "[Her] bravery and beauty haunts me still."

"Two and a Half Men" star Ashton Kutcher and supermodel Elle Macpherson were up next to present Best Actress in a TV Series - Comedy or Musical. The Globe went to Laura Dern for "Enlightened," marking her third win overall at the event.

Teleprompter problems plagued Rob Lowe and Julianne Moore as they introduced this year's Miss Golden Globe (Rainey Qualley, daughter of actress Andy MacDowell). The pair went on to present the award for Best Mini-Series or TV Movie to "Downton Abbey." Fans of the hit PBS series include Patton Oswalt, who once tweeted that the show is "Star Trek for tea drinkers!"

"We're already five minutes over," Gervais chided when he returned to the stage, digging into overly long acceptance speeches. "You don't need to thank everyone you've ever met ... just do the main two, your agent and God." The self-described atheist added that both had an "equal amount" of input into his career. From there, he brought up the scene in "Bridesmaids" where Melissa McCarthy's character moves her bowels in a sink. "Amazingly, that's still less demeaning than what most of you have done to make it in show business," he told the audience.

McCarthy and Paula Patton gave the Best Actor in a Comedy Series Globe to Kelsey Grammer for "Boss" (prompting viewers like @mindykaling to reminisce about the actor's semi-legendary fall from a stage) and Best TV Series - Drama to "Homeland."

Jimmy Fallon broke out his Mick Jagger moves before presenting the award for Best Song and Best Score with Maroon Five's Adam Levine to "The Artist" composer Ludovic Bource. Madonna and Elton John had earlier engaged in some red-carpet cattiness about the Best Original Song - Motion Picture category, in which they were both nominated. Ultimately, it was Madge who triumphed: Her win for the song she wrote for directorial effort "W.E." followed a previous Golden Globe for her starring performance in 1996's "Evita."

Seth Rogen and a typically stunning Kate Beckinsale soon followed. "Hello, I'm Seth Rogen, and I am currently trying to conceal a massive erection," he said, which kept Beckinsale laughing as they introduced the nominees for Best Actress in a Comedy.

Michelle Williams won for "My Week with Marilyn," a film Rogen dryly called a "hysterical comedy" (the movie is arguably more of a drama, despite its categorization). "I consider myself a mother first and an actress second, so the person that I most want to thank is my daughter," Williams said, speaking about Matilda Rose, her child with late actor Heath Ledger. She also thanked the HFPA "for putting in my hands this same award that Marilyn Monroe herself won over 50 years ago. Thank you, I'm honored."

Sarah Michelle Gellar and Piper Parabo presented Best Supporting Actor in a TV Series, Mini-Series or TV Movie to Peter Dinklage for "Game of Thrones."

"I was talking to my mother in Jersey before I came out and she said, 'Have fun but, 'Have you seen Mildred Pierce? Guy Pearce is so good, he's going to win!'. ... I just love our moms, 'cause they keep us humble," Dinklage said. He then drew attention to the story of Martin Henderson, a dwarf who suffered a serious injury reportedly inspired by a cruel "dwarf-tossing" competition.

Ricky's punch line when he introduced Madonna was little more than a well-placed clearing of his throat, which followed this: "Our next presenter is the Queen of Pop — not you, Elton, sit down. She's all woman. I'll give you some clues: She's always vogue. She's a material girl. And she's just like a virgin ... ahem." The Queen of Pop was ready with a quick retort: "If I'm still just like a virgin, then why don't you come over here and do something about it?" she challenged. "I haven't kissed a girl in a few years — on TV."

"Seriously nuts... Seriously," Spencer said after Bradley Cooper introduced Best Supporting Actress in a Motion Picture. "The Help" star has been stacking up awards this month for her part in the breakout hit. "With regard to domestics in this country, now and then I think Dr. King said it best: 'All labor that uplifts humanity has dignity and importance.' " She then sped through her thank-you's in a comedic nod to the show's habit of playing off winners mid-speech. "Table 10, thank you again!" she concluded.

Reese Witherspoon introduced "The Descendants," which she noted was directed by "my friend, Alexander Payne," with whom she made the classic dark comedy, "Election." Later in the show, Robert Downey Jr. introduced the film "The Artist."

Morgan Freeman is only the second African American actor to receive the prestigious Cecil B. DeMille Award; he accepted it 30 years after Sidney Poitier was similarly honored in 1982. The 84-year-old Poitier received a standing ovation when he came out to introduce Freeman. "In my humble opinion, sir, you are indeed a prince in the profession you have chosen. We thank you, Mr. Freeman, for raising the level of excellence yet another notch. Welcome aboard, Morgan Freeman," he said. The 74-year-old Freeman was honored for a career that includes iconic roles in movies like "Driving Miss Daisy," "Glory," "The Shawshank Redemption" and "Million Dollar Baby."

Angelina Jolie gave Martin Scorsese Best Director - Motion Picture for "Hugo." "Sit down, sit down, everybody!" he commanded. He thanked the HFPA for all of the work they do to help ensure the preservation and restoration of cinema, which tied directly into "Hugo."

Gervais joked about Salma Hayek and Antonio Banderas' accents when he introduced them, prompting a long, non-English response from Banderas. "Ricky, I don't understand [Banderas] either," Hayek teased. The pair gave the Golden Globe for Best Television Series - Comedy or Musical to "Modern Family," with Columbian castmember Sofia Vergara accepting with a short speech in Spanish that one of the show's producers comically mistranslated.

Michelle Pfeiffer introduced Steven Spielberg's "War Horse." Presenters Jessica Biel and Mark Wahlberg were up next. Wahlberg complimented Biel's pronunciation of Jean Dujardin (Best Actor winner for Motion Picture, Comedy or Musical), before Queen Latifah introduced "The Help." Then Gervais was back onstage. "Nearly there, nearly there," he said at the two-and-a-half-hour mark.

"Our next presenter is British, like me. But unlike me, he's won an Oscar, for his brilliant portrayal in 'The King's Speech.' He's also swooned over by women," Gervais went on, also noting Colin Firth's high profile with critics. "What you don't know about him is he's very racist. I've also seen him punch a little blind kitten. Please welcome the evil Colin Firth!"

Firth pretended to kick Gervais when he came out, but the actor was smiling. "As I was on my way in, I noticed some very angry religious people outside threatening us all with brimstone ... for our sins. ... What they don't realize is we have Ricky."

"When Ricky Gervais' deal fell through and they came to me to play Margret Thatcher," Meryl Streep began as she accepted Best Actress, Motion Picture for "The Iron Lady." Clooney helped pass her glasses to the stage so she could better read her speech, but she stayed off her notes and offered heartfelt appreciation for all of the women nominated in the category alongside her. "I just want to thank my agent and God — Harvey Weinstein, the punisher," she added to much laughter and applause.

Jane Fonda presented Best Motion Picture, Comedy or Musical to "The Artist," as even the dog from the film took the stage.

Natalie Portman, Best Actress for "Black Swan" at last year's Globe's, was the next presenter. Gervais pointed out that she's nominated for nothing this year, seeing how she took time off to have her baby. "She's learned that valuable lesson that all of you knew: never put family first!" Portman gave the Golden Globe for Best Actor, Motion Picture - Drama to Clooney for "The Descendants." The star first gave a shout-out to Brad Pitt, followed by a "thank you" to Michael Fassbender "for taking over the frontal nudity responsibility that I had," before making an off-color joke that involved golf. Alexander Payne accepted the Best Picture, Drama award from Harrison Ford shortly afterward.

Sound off on the 2012 Golden Globes winners in the comments below!

Stick with MTV News all night for the 2012 Golden Globes winners, and don't miss all the fashion from the Golden Globes red carpet!

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Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1677349/golden-globes-george-clooney.jhtml

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Monday, January 16, 2012

The Digital Camera Revolution

access View larger image 1. A camera built from off-the-shelf parts, dubbed the Frankencamera, is programmable. The team that designed it has also released the code needed to manipulate the commercially available Nokia N900. 2. The BigShot camera comes as an educational kit. During assembly, kids will learn about optics, mechanics, electronics and the human eye. Researchers hope to have the kit on the market within two years. 3. A throwable, panoramic ball camera developed by researchers at Technische Universit?t in Berlin snaps a full spherical panorama. There?s a design, but no word on investors ? yet. 4. The Pelican camera, designed to fit inside a smartphone, has an array of 25 lenslets that capture a scene?s entire light field. A release date hasn?t been announced. 5. Lytro ($399 for 8GB, $499 for 16GB) allows the photographer to refocus at will after a shot has been taken.from left: Camera 2.0 Project/Stanford University; Columbia Computer Vision Laboratory; Jonas Pfeil/jonaspfeil.de/Ballcamera; Pelican Imaging; LYTRO

Take a grainy, blurred image of a formless face or an illegible license plate, and with a few keystrokes the picture sharpens and the killer is caught ? if you?re a crime-scene tech on TV. From Harrison Ford in Blade Runner to CSI, Criminal Minds and NCIS, the zoom-and-enhance maneuver has become such a staple of Hollywood dramas that it?s mocked with video montages on YouTube.

In real life, of course, no amount of high-techery can disclose data not captured by a camera in the first place. But scientific advances are now gaining ground on fictional forensics. The field known as computational photography has exploded in the last decade, yielding powerful new cameras capable of tricks once seen only in the labs of make-believe.

For a long time camera makers and operators focused mostly on getting more pixels. But the ?pixel war? is over, says Marc Levoy, a pioneer in computational photography at Stanford University. Today?s manufacturers are looking beyond good resolution.

Low-cost computing and new algorithms, combined with fancy optics and sensors, are drastically changing how cameras re-create the world. Scientists have recently devised a camera that could spot a culprit by peeking around corners; another might divulge the identity of an attacker by collecting information reflected in a victim?s eyes. Other developments, some of which are making their way into commercially available cameras and smartphones, won?t necessarily help snag a bad guy but can turn anyone with a camera into a photo-grapher extraordinaire.

Researchers are, for example, finding ways to clean up pictures so that smudges or window screens disappear. The addition of unconventional lenses means pictures can be refocused long after a shot is taken. And the ?Frankencamera,? recently developed at Stanford, is designed to be programmable, so that users can play around with the hardware and the computer code behind it. Such work may lead to previously impossible photos, researchers say ? images that have yet to be imagined.

?The possibilities are not readily apparent at first,? write MIT?s Ramesh Raskar and Jack Tumblin of Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill., in a comprehensive textbook on computational photography set to be published this year. ?Like a long-caged animal in a zoo destroyed by a hurricane, those of us who grew up with film photography are still standing here in shocked astonishment at the changes.?

Caught on camera

Until a few years ago, most digital cameras were basically film cameras, just with an electronic sensor doing the job of the film. These ?filmlike? cameras use a lens to capture light from a 3-D scene, faithfully re-creating it as a 2-D image.

But in a digital camera, there?s no need for that re-creation to be faithful. Digital cameras have a tiny computer that processes incoming optical information before it is stored on the memory card. That computer can transform the scene, measuring, manipulating and combining visual signals in fundamentally new ways. With the help of tricked-out optics ? such as multiple lenses in different arrangements ? photographers can not only perfect the traditional recording of their lives, but they can also manipulate those keepsake shots to get something strange and different.

Advances in math and optics are now developing hand in hand, says Shree Nayar, head of the Computer Vision Laboratory at Columbia University. ?When you worry about both of them at the same time, you can do new and interesting things.?

One new and interesting thing is the ability to look around corners, beyond the line of sight. Developed in 2009 by Raskar, MIT graduate student Ahmed Kirmani and colleagues at MIT and the University of California, Santa Cruz, a new camera with a titanium-sapphire laser for a flash shoots brilliant light in pulses lasting less than a trillionth of a second. After the light ricochets off objects, including those not visible to the photographer, the camera collects the returning ?echoes.? The camera then analyzes the photons that return and can estimate shapes blocked by a wall or other obstruction.

The technology might lead to devices that allow drivers to see around blind corners or surgeons to get a better view in tight places. It could also help first responders plan rescues in dangerous situations and crime fighters spot hidden foes.

Another technology that might aid real-world sleuths is the ?world in an eye? imaging system, which can re-create a person?s surroundings from information reflected in a single eye. Using a geometric model of the eye?s cornea, Nayar and colleague Ko Nishino, now at Drexel University in Philadelphia, created a camera that detects where the cornea and the white of the eye meet. Computations then turn the cornea?s reflection of a fish bowl?like image into a map of the environmental surroundings projected on the person?s retina.

Using information on the tilt of the camera and the person?s eye positioning, whatever the person is looking at can be pinpointed, making the technology useful for eye-tracking studies where researchers want to know what a participant is paying attention to. The technology (which is available as a software package from the Computer Vision Laboratory) is also helping people look into the past. One photographer has been assessing reflections in the eyes of old photographs, exposing a blurred scene reflected in the eye of an old man in an 1840 portrait.

Picture perfect

If just capturing precious moments is more your style, many researchers, Nayar included, are exploring ways to enhance pictures taken for the more traditional purpose of archiving one?s life. There are methods for getting around that annoying shutter delay that makes you miss your shot, for deblurring moving objects and even for erasing raindrops that obscure what a picture was meant to capture.

Such tricks are gradually making their way into commercial cameras, or being made available as downloadable apps for use with smartphones. One new camera dubbed Lytro, developed by Ren Ng for his dissertation at Stanford, can readjust the focus post-shoot, so a picture can clearly render what?s nearby or far away.

Lytro?s trick is it that it employs ?radically different optics,? says Stanford?s Levoy, who worked on those optics with Ng.

In between the main lens and the sensor, Lytro has an array of tiny lenses called lenslets that capture an entire light field ? the intensity, color and direction of every ray of incoming light (in this case, that?s 11 million rays). Whereas a traditional camera captures some of the light leaving any one point in a scene and focuses it back together on a single pixel on a sensor, the lenslets distribute the light so it is recorded in separate pixels. This spread of information across pixels is encoded in the image, making refocusing later possible.

Lytro became commercially available last year, and another light-field camera may soon be available in smartphones. Last February Pelican Imaging announced a prototype for mobile devices that has an array of 25 lenslets. Like Lytro, Pelican promises images that can be refocused. But unlike Lytro?s boxy shape, this version would fit in the slender confines of a cell phone.

Arrays of full cameras (not just the lenses) also allow for interesting manipulations. When packed close together, the cameras approximate a giant lens, which means much more light is available for manipulating. Photos can thus be created with a shallow depth of field so that the photo?s subject is nice and crisp and the background is blurred, freeing the image from distracting clutter. A giant lens also means that a photographer can capture enough light from different angles to blur out foreground objects like foliage or venetian blinds, in effect looking around them. One of Stanford?s large-camera arrays has 128 video cameras set up 2 inches apart. The arrangement is like having a camera with a 3-foot-wide aperture.

Tweaks to a camera?s back end are also improving documentary potential. Image sensors have become much better at capturing light, so cameras can take many more pictures per second. A high frame rate combined with complex math means the camera can snap many versions of the same picture at different exposures and then merge them for the best results or select the best of the single images, a trick known as high dynamic range imaging.

New cameras can also deal with shutter lag. When set in a particular mode, the camera begins taking a burst of photos and temporarily saves them. The photographer gets the typical shot (the one taken when the shutter is clicked) as well as a series of shots from before and after.

?It?s something I?ve always wanted in a camera ? for it to start taking pictures before something interesting happens,? says Tumblin. ?So when your daughter is blowing out her birthday candles, you have a sequence of shots, one right after the other.?

Made to order

It?s all well and good that camera manufacturers are getting around to incorporating such advances, Levoy says. But he has higher hopes ? that consumer cameras will one day be programmable, giving users the power to get exactly what they want out of the device.

?I came out of computer graphics where anyone can play around,? Levoy says. ?The camera industry is not like that. It?s very secretive.?

While every digital camera has a computer inside, it?s usually locked in a black box. You can?t get in there and program it. Several hacking tools exist for liberating the code of particular cameras, but Levoy and his colleagues wanted to play around with settings without resorting to such measures. So Levoy and colleagues built the programmable Frankencamera.

Dealing with commercially available cameras ?was just a painful experience,? says Andrew Adams, who worked with Levoy and is now at MIT. ?So after getting sufficiently frustrated at the programming that exists, we decided to make our own camera.?

The Frankencamera started out as a clunky black thing built with off-the-shelf components (hence the ?Franken?). But in the spirit of computer science, the camera is easy to program, running on Linux-based software. With a little effort, the camera can be made to, say, use gyroscope data to determine if it is moving when a picture is taken. If so, it can select the sharpest photo from a bunch that are taken, an application Adams calls ?lucky imaging.?

Nokia was interested enough in the Frankencamera to help researchers make their computer code compatible with the Nokia N900. The researchers began using the N900 in the classroom and have been shipping it around the world to other academics in the field of computational photography.

?The first assignment was to replace the autofocus algorithm,? says Adams. ?It was so cool; we gave them a week and they came up with better things than Nokia.?

One student took several pictures over circular objects from above and programmed the camera to average the pictures together, yielding an image that normally could be captured only with a much larger lens, says Adams. Several other manipulations have been explored, such as panoramic stitching, high dynamic range imaging and flash/no-flash imaging, which combines shots taken with and without a flash to create a photograph that displays the best of both. The Frankencamera team released its code in 2010, so anyone can add these capabilities to the Nokia N900.

The camera has also been set up for ?rephotography,? the retaking of a previously taken photo, historic or otherwise. The camera looks for distinguishing features in a scene, such as corners, and directs the photographer with arrows to align the camera precisely, creating a second version of the original picture but in a new season or new time in history.

With all the new souped-up cameras rolling out, the dangers of shaky hands or poor lighting are rapidly becoming concerns of the past. And the ability to make a picture bizarre, or shocking, is now available to anyone with the right smartphone and app. But once Frankencameras and similar build-your-own devices are in the hands of enough people, the creative possibilities balloon. You name it, programmers will find a way to do it.

?There?s a catchphrase,? Adams says: ?Computation is the new optics.?


Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/feature/id/337554/title/The_Digital_Camera_Revolution

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