5 SECONDS OF SUMMER

Michael Clifford Fires Back at Abigail Breslin's Diss Track

Stars Most Stylish Selfie of the Week

Stars Most Stylish Selfie of the Week

GMAIL BLOCKED IN CHINA

5-Minute Outfit Idea

5-Minute Outfit Idea: An Effortless, Polished Look to Try This Weekend.

Facebook suffers outage

Facebook suffers outage affecting users worldwide!! .

Monday, 17 November 2014

Russia plans alternative version of Wikipedia to ensure 'detailed and reliable' information

Russia plans alternative version of Wikipedia to ensure 'detailed and reliable' information
Reuters
Russia plans to create its own Wikipedia to ensure its citizens have access to more "detailed and reliable" information about their country, the presidential library says.
Citing Western threats, the Kremlin has asserted more control over the internet this year in what critics call moves to censor the web, and has introduced more pro-Kremlin content similar to closely controlled state media such as television.
Wikipedia, the online encyclopaedia assembled and written by internet users around the world, has pages dedicated to nearly every region or major city within Russia's 11 time zones, but the Kremlin library said this was not good enough.
"Analysis of this resource showed that it is not capable of providing information about the region and life of the country in a detailed or sufficient way," the state news agency RIA quoted a statement from the presidential library as saying.
"The creation of an alternative Wikipedia has begun."

It was not known whether the project might affect Russians' access to the existing Wikipedia in any way. President Vladimir Putin has branded the internet a "CIA special project", and the Kremlin has said it must protect its online realm from threats from the West, as ties between the Cold War-era foes have hit a new bottom over the Ukraine crisis.
Since August, bloggers in Russia with more than 3,000 followers must register with the Moscow's mass media regulatory agency and conform to rules applied to larger media outlets.
And since February, state authorities have been able to block websites without a court order.
The webpages of two leading Kremlin critics were among the first to be barred.

The presidential library statement said that 50,000 books and archive documents from 27 libraries around Russia had already been handed over for the process of establishing the "alternative Wikipedia".


Doubts about a nuclear deal with Iran as talks near deadline

Doubts about a nuclear deal with Iran as talks near deadline

The Washington Post 



For the six global powers in talks with Iran, the goals have always been clear — blocking Iran’s path to a nuclear bomb while eventually lifting sanctions that have hobbled its economy and caused hardship for the Iranian people.

But as negotiators gather in Vienna this week in one last push for a deal, decades of mutual mistrust and years of Iranian obfuscation on its nuclear program may be proving too much to surmount.

Three days of talks in Oman last week produced no leap forward, with a deadline for an accord fast approaching. Now, negotiators and nuclear experts are sounding increasingly skeptical that a comprehensive deal is likely or even possible by the Nov. 24 deadline.

Iranian and Russian negotiators, who recently offered assurances that there was plenty of time to strike a deal, acknowledged last week that talks may be extended. President Obama warned, “We may not be able to get there.”

“It’s pretty clear that, barring a miracle, there’s not going to be a comprehensive deal struck on the 24th of November,” said Mark Fitzpatrick, a former U.S. diplomat who is director of the nonproliferation and disarmament program at the International Institute for Strategic Studies. “The two sides just remain too far apart, and the amount of horse-trading that would be required for a deal is too complex to get it all done in time, even if both sides really wanted to.”

Under an interim agreement, Iran has frozen the buildup of its nuclear capacity. Without an extension, that pact dies Nov. 24. If Iran chose to walk away and resume expanding its nuclear capacity, it could lead to a military confrontation that could escalate quickly beyond Iran’s borders in a region racked by war, violence and political instability.

The best-case scenario is that both camps agree to keep talking.

“What is still possible is a breakthrough that could justify adding more time to the clock,” said Ali Vaez, a scientist who focuses on Iran for the International Crisis Group.

High hurdles

The elusiveness of a final agreement after a year of intense negotiations indicates the seriousness with which both sides view the talks and the high hurdles that remain.

The negotiations had been sputtering along in fits and starts for almost a decade, then took on new life last year after a moderate, Hassan Rouhani, was elected president of Iran. He promised to rid the country of the bruising sanctions that have sent the economy into a tailspin, which has been compounded by plummeting oil prices.

The negotiators — Iran and the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council plus Germany — have been tight-lipped on details, many of which are mind-numbingly complex and technical. But three broad sticking points have emerged.

The six negotiating partners, primarily the United States, want Iran to slash its 19,000 uranium-enriching centrifuges to levels low enough that monitors would notice if Iran cheated and tried to make a nuclear bomb. Iran says its nuclear industry is for civilian energy production and medicine, and it has balked at cuts.

Skeptics in the United States and elsewhere want to know whether Iran once had a nuclear weapons program, as many believe, and if it is ongoing. But Iran has not provided enough access or information for the International Atomic Energy Agency to conclusively rule on a possible military dimension to Iran’s program.

For its part, Iran appears to be insisting on a rapid lifting of all sanctions. American and European diplomats want the measures to be removed gradually, after Iran shows it is cooperating.

“If you can’t agree on key parameters, that will raise legitimate questions on whether a final deal can be concluded,” said Robert Einhorn, a senior fellow with the Brookings Institution who specializes in arms-control and nonproliferation issues. “It’s going to take a lot of cooperation by Iran, and that’s going to take awhile. It’s unrealistic to ask Congress to vote to lift sanctions before Iran does that.”

Wild card in Washington

Congress is one of the wild cards in any delay. Many Republican and Democratic members believe that sanctions helped nudge Iran to the negotiating table and that they are being eroded by an administration ­eager for a legacy-building deal. Some already are talking about imposing more sanctions as leverage to make Iran more transparent and cooperative with IAEA monitors.

When the GOP gains control of Congress in January, Republicans are likely to be less willing to wait for the talks to evolve, particularly if the price of keeping Iran at the table is a partial easing of some sanctions.

George Perkovich, who focuses on nuclear and nonproliferation issues at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, said more sanctions by Congress could push the Iranians to give up on talks entirely.

“It would create a lot of pressure within Iran from those who say, ‘Look, the United States is totally about regime change, it’s all they’ve ever been after,’” he said. “In my opinion, it makes more sense to let Iran be the ones who escalate, so the rest of the world sees them as provocateurs rather than the U.S. being the one seen as escalating things.”

Olli Heinonen, who works on nuclear nonproliferation issues at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government, said Iran may be stalling out of a sense of overconfidence. He said some in Iran may believe they have the upper hand in talks because the United States and its partners are preoccupied with the spread of Islamist militancy elsewhere in the Middle East.

“This can’t go on forever,” he said of the talks, predicting they will be extended for a few months more. “It will be on the 24th, late at night, or early in the morning of the 25th, when we find out. It’s going to be a long, long night. I wouldn’t be surprised if the clocks in Vienna are stopped for a while.”


Nintendo UK launches digital magazine, Nintendo Extra

Nintendo UK launches digital magazine, Nintendo Extra

S. Prell
Joystiq


Nintendo fans in the UK may have lost their ability to peruse Nintendo-related news and features via the printed page when the Official Nintendo Magazine shut down last month, but now there's a digital magazine to take its place. Dubbed "Nintendo Extra," this new branch of the Nintendo UK site features articles based on several key company franchises, including Pokemon, Mario Kart, Pikmin and The Legend of Zelda.
Before you get too carried away however, most of the content included in this first issue of Nintendo Extra is quite short, and few articles amount to more than advertisements for their respective game. There is some noteworthy content however, including tips on getting the best time in Mario Kart 8 and an interview with Legend of Zelda series producer Eiji Aonuma (though the questions - such as "Who are Link and Zelda?" - aren't exactly what you'd call "hard-hitting").
So maybe "digital magazine" isn't quite the way to describe Nintendo Extra - perhaps "digital pamphlet" or "brochure" might be better. But hey, a digital whatever-it-is is better than nothing, right?
[Image: Nintendo]Nintendo Extra

The Shadow Sun is Coming to Android

The Shadow Sun is Coming to Android

by Jim Squires
Gamezebo

When it launched last fall, we were quick to confirm that The Shadow Sun was worth the wait. An RPG from the team behind Mysteries of Westgate (a Neverwinter Nights 2 expansion), The Shadow Sun was originally announced way back in 2010. It was so long in coming that some of us had quietly written it off as vaporware.
But arrive it did — and now, a year after its iOS release, Android gamers are going to get their first taste of what The Shadow Sun has to offer.



“With The Shadow Sun, our goal was to make a high quality RPG for mobile devices in the spirit of the classics from PC and console,” said Alan Miranda, CEO of Ossian Studios. “We are thrilled to bring the game to Android gamers.”
While the game will be coming to Android “soon,” no specific release date has been given. When it does, Android gamers be treated to a robust character creation system, intriguing options both in and outside of combat, and 10+ hours of gameplay.

Apple Adds UnionPay, China’s Largest Bankcard Network, To App Store Payment Options

Apple Adds UnionPay, China’s Largest Bankcard Network, To App Store Payment Options

Catherine Shu
TechCrunch



App Store customers in China can now link their UnionPay debit or credit cards to their Apple IDs for purchases, Apple announced today.
This is significant for Apple and Chinese consumers because China UnionPay, a bankcard network approved by China’s State Council and the People’s Bank of China, enjoys a virtual monopoly. It has issued more than 4.5 billion cards in China, and is available in all cities, as well as in overseas market. China (which has an estimated 100 million iPhone users) is Apple’s most important growth market; in its recent fourth-quarter earnings report, the company reported that the market generated $29.8 billion, or 16 percent, in net sales in 2014.

China UnionPay is the only interbank network in mainland China to link all ATMs. Government regulations mean that all ATMs and Chinese merchants have to use UnionPay to process payments in renminbi, as well as foreign credit card companies like Visa, MasterCard, and American Express, which pay UnionPay a fee for each transaction. Previously, customers made payments on the App Store through their telecom operator, like China Mobile, with their credit cards, or through prepayments.

In a statement, Eddy Cue, Apple’s senior vice president of Internet Software and Services, said “the ability to buy apps and make purchases using UnionPay cards has been one of the most requested features from our customers in China. China is already our second largest market for app downloads, and now we’re providing users with an incredibly convenient way to purchase their favorite apps with just one tap.”

The link-up between Apple and UnionPay is also interesting because it comes after news that Alipay, which was founded by the Alibaba Group, and Apple Pay may consider striking a partnership. An Alipay-Apple hookup may also give the Cupertino-based company more leverage against UnionPay, which was slow to strike an agreement with Apple.

But even though Alipay is China’s largest online payments system and is keen to broaden its online-to-offline business as well, the physical retail market is still overwhelmingly dominated by UnionPay. Furthermore, Alipay is still not available for Apple services, including the App Store.

While it hasn’t been made official, a partnership between the two tech giants seems likely: during a recent visit to China, Cook gushed Alipay, saying “we love to partner with people that are wicked smart, that have flexible teams, that are product based and we like to push them. I think Jack [Ma, Alibaba Group’s founder] has a company just like that.” Another good sign for Alipay is the decision, made late last month, by the State Council to open its payment system to foreign companies, which could also allow Alipay to expand its physical payment points because it means it no longer has to follow UnionPay’s rules.

6-Year-Old Says He's World's Youngest Certified Microsoft Professional

6-Year-Old Says He's World's Youngest Certified Microsoft Professional

Leigh Weingus
The Huffington Post 


A 6-year-old boy in the U.K. is claiming the title of the youngest Microsoft Certified Professional in the world.
Ayan Qureshi, who lives with his family in Coventry, U.K., passed the tech giant's test when he was just 5 years old, the BBC reported. His father, Asim Qureshi, told The Huffington Post via email that he introduced his son to computers he was 3.
"He started playing with computer bits and pieces and was made familiar with many features of the Windows operating system," Asim Qureshi said. "It became a hobby for him."




After realizing that his son had a serious knack for computers, Asim Qureshi started helping him study for the Microsoft Certified Professional exam, he said. The test "validates IT professional and developer technical expertise through rigorous, industry-proven, and industry-recognized exams," according to Microsoft's website.

"In the beginning it wasn't easy at all," Asim Qureshi said. "It took many months to prepare for the exam. For this purpose, Ayan studied Microsoft books and set up a home computer lab to do the preparation for the certification."
But the months of preparation paid off: Ayan is now a certified IT professional. He told BBC News that the exam was “difficult but enjoyable.”

He also has some impressive future plans. BBC News reported that he wants to launch E-Valley in the U.K. one day, which will be very similar to Silicon Valley.

There's An Incredible Meteor Shower Happening This Week

There's An Incredible Meteor Shower Happening This Week

Jessica Orwig
Business Insider 



November is the time of year to watch one of the most brilliant meteor showers of the year: the Leonid meteor shower, also known as the Leonids.
The Leonids became famous during the 17th century for their impressive show of shooting stars. In 1833, for example, the most stunning part of the meteor shower displayed up to 100 thousand meteor per hour.


This year's Leonid meteor shower will not be as spectacular as the one in 1833, but reports suggest that it will still be a site worth seeing. Also, the Leonids are one of the last meteor showers of the year. The Geminids meteor shower will follow in December.
The best time to see the Leonids this year will be Nov. 17 and 18 between the hours of midnight and dawn. During those hours, observers can expect to see about 15 meteors per hour, or about one every 4 minutes. The best way to see a meteor shower is to get far away from city lights where you can clearly see the stars.

To view the Leonids, astronomers suggest that viewers look at the part of the sky between the East horizon and the point right above to view the Leonids.
Below is a map from AccuWeather indicating where in the US that the weather is expected to provide clear skies for the best viewing.

When Earth passes through the tail of comet Tempel-Tuttle, the dust and debris the comet leaves behind is swept up by Earth's gravity. As a result, the debris strikes the Earth's atmosphere at incredible speeds — for the Leonids it's about 44 miles per second.


At these speeds, the debris of the comet and the molecules in Earth's atmosphere rub against each other creating tremendous friction. It's this friction that generates heat and light that we then see as a "shooting star".

Each meteor shower is named for the constellation from which the falling meteors appear to emerge. The Leonids are named for the constellation Leo, which is Latin for lion.
If you're not in a good place to view the Leonids, you can still watch the show because the live online observatory, Slooh, will be streaming the event live (feed below) starting tomorrow, Monday, at 8 pm EST (5 pm PST).

A folding electric bike that fits in a bag? Impossible

A folding electric bike that fits in a bag? 
Impossible

Daniel Cooper
Engadget 


If there's one area of technology that seems permanently mired in the '70s, it's that of the fold-up bicycle. In fact, the last innovation we can recall is Sir Clive Sinclair'sA-Bike from 2006, but it's still big enough to be difficult to carry around. That's what inspired the folks at Impossible Technology to try and re-invent the commuter bicycle for the modern era. Rather than using straight lines, the Impossible Bike is based on two circles, from which wheels pull down and the seat and handle extends out from the top. The hard plastic carrying case which protects the unit when folded down - small enough to fit into a backpack - pulls double duty as the seat.


There's no pedals on the Impossible, instead, a brushless electric motor (currently in development) will propel you through the streets. Equipped with 10 2,900mAh batteries, the current model apparently has a range limit of 15.6 miles, unless you kick it into turbo mode, at which point it'll rocket up to 12.4mph for 45 minutes. Unfortunately, at least this one Engadget editor will have to take a pass on backing the device, since it comes with an upper weight limit of 180 pounds, although we're not sure if the quirky carbon-fiber frame would even be able to sustain someone of that girth. Since the vehicle doesn't come with suspension, we'd imagine it'd also be a bit of a pain if you don't live in a city where the pavements are perfectly smooth. Still, it's a curious piece of hardware, and we can't wait to see it in the flesh when it arrives in August of next year - if you're interested in taking the risk and backing it now, it'll set you back $530 unless you can bag an early-bird deal.
Kickstarter

Times Square's new digital billboard is almost the length of a football field

Times Square's new digital billboard is almost the length of a football field

Mat Smith
Engadget


New Yorkers passing through Times Square will see (whether they want to or not) the biggest, most expensive digital billboard (at least in the US) when it turns on this Tuesday night. The screen is big enough to run a whole block, from 45th to 46th Street along Broadway, and is made up of 24 million pixels. (To contrast, 4K TVs weigh in with around 8 million pixel, although the scale here is massively different.) Oh yeah, it's also eight stories high. According to the New York Times, the cost of this prime advertising real estate comes in at over $2.5 million for four weeks. Google, a company that has the means, will take over the big screen as the debut advertiser until 2015. But we can go bigger: LG's already using the world's biggest billboard in Saudi Arabia, which is 820 feet long.
NYT


Sunday, 16 November 2014

As Developers Depart, Google Glass Is Ready To Become This Era’s Segway

As Developers Depart, Google Glass Is Ready To Become This Era’s Segway

Mike Butcher
TechCrunch 



Just over 18 months ago Google Chairman Eric Schmidt said he found having to talk to Google Glass out loud “the weirdest thing” and admitted that there would be “places where Google Glass are inappropriate.” Well, hello! I think the average person could have told Google this long before they spent millions developing the thing, and as I wrote at the time, the product was simply incapable of becoming a mass-market device. I predicted it would become this era’s Segway: hyped as a game changer but ultimately used by warehouse workers and mall cops. Indeed, Glass might well be our surveillance era’s perfect pairing.


Now Reuters has uncovered clear evidence that app developers are dropping the device.
Nine of the 16 app Glass app makers that Reuters contacted admitted they’d abandoned their efforts. Meanwhile, “The Glass Collective,” a venture fund backing Glass apps has gone and now redirects to the Glass page, while three of Google’s key employees on the Glass team have departed.
Admittedly, Facebook and OpenTable are among the larger developers persevering with Glass and remain two of the 100 apps on the official Glass web site — though the official Twitter app has been withdrawn.

Meanwhile, Google co-founder Sergey Brin recently went to a red-carpet event without his normally ever-present Glass. Signs the product is ready for the chop?
Reuter’s sources say a full consumer launch may now be “delayed” to 2015. Google’s people say a consumer launch is still on.

But I think we can safely say that, even if Google did launch it to consumers, the simplest thing for Google to do now would be to release the underlying technology for startups to hack around with.
Industrial applications – building and manufacturing, security, training – could be the future for Glass. Indeed, Taco Bell and KFC are considering Glass as a potential training method for employees. And five developers that have joined the programme are all in the enterprise space.
Goodbye red carpet, hello Mall Cops and McDonald’s.

The iPhone Case That Can Call the Police

The iPhone Case That Can Call the Police

John Tierney
The Atlantic



A startup company in Pittsburgh called Lifeshel is working on technology designed to enable people facing assault or other emergencies to contact police in the smartest and fastest way possible. Their first product is a smartphone case and accompanying app that together provide what seems to be a promising deterrent technology.

Yes, I'm aware—and so are the young men who founded this company—that the problem of assault, especially sexual assault, in this country is a deep one that can only be solved by fundamental cultural shifts and changes in attitude. But that sort of change takes time, and in the meantime technology could provide some assistance to those in need.
Article Continues Below 
The Lifeshel case, called a Whistl, fits over a user’s smartphone and is activated by buttons on the outside of the case. When those buttons are pressed, the device emits an alert of 120 decibels, which the company says is the equivalent of being in the front row at a concert. The sound can be heard easily up to 300 feet away. The button also activates a strobing LED that’s designed to disorient an attacker and call attention to the location of the attack.

Bluetooth technology embedded in the case sends distress signals through the app to law-enforcement authorities and pre-programmed emergency contacts, notifying them of the location and providing identifying information. And to top it all off the buttons activate video and audio recording through the app, with the aim, the company says, of reducing “he-said-she-said confusion in the aftermath” of an attack.

There's also a "check-in" feature that monitors the user's safety. It checks in at pre-set intervals, essentially asking "Are you okay?" If the user doesn't click the buttons on the case, or signals, "No," the device automatically contacts the police. People who have tried test models use the check-in feature frequently when they're walking home late at night from a party or a movie or go for a run at night. The company says their users like having that extra layer of security.

Lifeshel is working on another app that will provide users with a safe community of first responders—trusted friends or other network users who may be nearby and able to respond more quickly and compassionately than the police.

I came across Lifeshel when I was in Pittsburgh in September for our American Futures reporting series.* I had gone to the East Liberty offices of AlphaLab Gear, a hardware and robotics startup accelerator that is part of Innovation Works, the region's largest and most active investor in seed-stage companies. I wanted to talk with the leadership there about their operation and about the booming tech sector in Pittsburgh. (I’ll be writing soon about AlphaLab and Innovation Works.)

As I was leaving after a productive interview, Ilana Diamond, managing director of AlphaLab Gear, introduced me to Jayon Wang, the young founder and CEO of Lifeshel. He is a 2013 mechanical-engineering graduate of Carnegie Mellon University (CMU). The other co-founder still with the company is Alan Fu, also a 2013 graduate of CMU; his degree was in Materials Science.

They got to know each other in 2009 when they lived on the same dormitory floor at CMU, where—as at almost every other college in America—campus safety has become a prominent concern in the past few years. Wang told me that he, Fu, and Ramos “knew people on campus who had been sexually assaulted, whose cases were never properly resolved because there was no evidence, there was no concrete data that showed when something happened and how it happened.”

In fact, they drew their inspiration directly from the experience of Leah Yingling, a friend of theirs from CMU, who was attacked one day on a running trail in broad daylight in her hometown of Johnstown, PA, and somehow managed, during the attack, to unlock her phone and dial 911, which sounded an alert and led her attacker to flee.

When it comes to assault, and particularly sexual assault, Yingling's attack is a bit unusual. Most women aren't assaulted by strangers or in public. In fact, according to the Rape, Abuse and Incest National Network two thirds of sexual assaults are committed by someone the victim knows. And in many of those cases, victims fear alerting anybody to their abuse, lest their partner escalate the attacks. In these cases a flashing, screaming iPhone case won't help. But in the small percentage of cases in which the attack is in public and coming from a stranger, the case could provide at least a feeling of safety, if not help a potential victim.

Wang hopes the technology Lifeshel is developing will “shift the needle” in favor of those assaulted by giving them the means to collect footage and transmit a call for help instantaneously to police. The crucial advantage this technology confers is the ability to activate the system without unlocking the phone. At the same time, it has been designed so that it is very difficult to set off an alarm accidentally. But if that were to happen, the user has a self-selected window of time (say, 30 seconds) to disable the alarm before police are notified. Deactivating the panic mode requires a personalized security gesture or ID combination, so only the owner is able to deactivate the alarm.

Lifeshel’s cases won’t be available for purchase until the first or second quarter of 2015, but the company has “established interested communities of consumers through our pre-orders, product testing, and relationships with community-service groups.” For example, they tested a 20-unit network this past year on CMU’s campus, with the assistance of administrators and campus police, to whom the units were distributed. The test was successful. Users were pleased by the sense of security the device provided. The next test will be a 50-unit network used by CMU students.

In addition, Wang and his colleagues have established a strong partnership with Pittsburgh Action Against Rape (PAAR), a victim-service agency and rape-crisis program that has been active since 1972. Wang says the relationship with PAAR has enabled a conversation between the company and sexual-assault victims that allows them to create products designed with special attention to the interests and needs of people who have experienced sexual assault.

For now, the Whistl and Capsi are being developed for the iPhone 5 and 6, with Android versions to come later.


Saturday, 15 November 2014

Taylor Swift Tells Chinese Streaming Services to Take Her Music Down

Taylor Swift Tells Chinese Streaming Services to Take Her Music Down



Taylor shows off her best fall fashion while going on a little shopping excursion on Friday (November 14) in New York City.
After making headlines by taking her music off Spotify, the 24-year-old singer is also taking her music off streaming services in China.
According to China Music Business, the country’s main streaming platforms were told on October 29 by Universal Music China that they must remove all of Taylor‘s music from any free components of their services.