Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Jimmy Fallon ?embarrassed? by Bachmann debacle (The Cutline)

Fallon (NBC/Rock Center)

Jimmy Fallon says the late-night ruckus caused by his house band's choice of intro music for GOP Rep. Michele Bachmann when she was a guest on his show last month was an embarrassment.

"I was embarrassed by that, and I wanted it to go away," Fallon told Brian Williams on Monday's "Rock Center."

Fallon said he called Bachmann "numerous times" the next day to apologize but didn't hear from her. (Fallon apologized via Twitter, and NBC executives sent Bachmann a formal letter of apology.)

When Fallon was finally able to speak with Bachmann, he said she told him she was confused by the introduction.

"I had a kick on your show, I had a kick on your show," Fallon said, mimicking the Minnesota Congresswoman's Midwestern accent. "I just don't know why Questlove played that."

"I said, 'I'm so sorry, and he'll call and apologize,' " Fallon said. "He's been yelled at by his mother.' "

The day after the incident, Bachmann slammed NBC for showing its "bias," saying First Lady Michelle Obama would not have been treated that way.

On Monday, Fallon said he agreed. "I guess so, sure. I don't think anyone, if it's Brian Williams on our show, should be treated like that."

You can watch the full video of Fallon's appearance after the jump below:

Other popular Yahoo! News stories:
? The 40 most-shared articles on Facebook in 2011
? Fox News' Greta Van Susteren fails to disclose husband's relationship with Herman Cain on air
? ESPN questioned over Syracuse tape; Times criticized for coverage of Penn State victim

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/yblog_thecutline/20111206/bs_yblog_thecutline/jimmy-fallon-embarrassed-by-bachmann-debacle

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Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Trump: Romney 'doesn't get the traction' in race (The Arizona Republic)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/170034719?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Sims 3 and Sims 3 Pets : An Island Life

I will admit it, I love The Sims.? I?m not a computer game person, in fact, I?m not really into games at all but I have one game I will play and that?s The Sims.? When it first came out, I was in college and since Facebook wasn?t created yet, I needed a way to put off doing my school work.? The solution?? The game The Sims loaded on my school computer.

I got so hooked on the game that I would actually give it to my sister just to keep myself from playing it when I had a big paper due.? The problem with that was that my sister also became hooked, thus giving her a good way to put off her High School homework.? Since then, we?ve both been closet fans of The Sims {except for that one October when we came out of the closet for one night and actually went as Sims for Halloween? yes, really} and we still hold a special place in our hearts for the game.

If you haven?t played it before, it?s basically a game that allows you to create people ? Sims ? and then build them a house before you let them loose into the Sim world.? Whether you create a world of chaos or order, the real fun is when you perform social experiments with all your Sims and see how they react and interact in certain situations.? For instance, if you remove the door to their house.? Or you create Sims that are attracted to each other who live next door? and are both married.

Even as much as I love The Sims, once I had children back in 2008, I kind of abandoned the game as I really couldn?t afford to lose hours out of my day playing.? While I have had a half hour of Sims here and there, I really haven?t played much since I became a mom.? Or, at least I didn?t.? Now I have The Sims 3 to distract me, and it?s the best reason ever to waste a naptime.

It might just be the fact that I haven?t played the game in a while and my life has had a huge hole ever since I stopped playing, but Sims 3 is like 100x more fun than the original game used to be.? You can customize your Sim more than ever before, you can control personalities better, and you can really direct Simville as I always wished you could.? And, the add-ons!? Even better than before, you seriously can get anything for your Sim that you can buy at the store, create, or dream up in your wildest imagination. ?When you add in their expansion packs, the fun is almost too much to handle.

My favorite expansion pack is the Sims 3 Pets which allows you to actually customize the pets your Sims adopt.? Now you can create pets that truly are members of the household, they look just how you like, have the personality you choose, learn tricks, and even are able to leave the house ? a feature I love!? From horses to kittens to tigers, you can now have the pet you always wanted? and you can make your Sim clean up after it.

Sims 3 and Sims 3 Pets are available for PC and Mac and are a great holiday gift for the gamers and non-gamers on your list!

Purchase your copy of Sims 3 and Sims 3 Pets at Amazon.com.

This post was written for Electronic Arts who provided the complimentary copies in exchange for my honest review.

About the Author: Leanne:
Rave and Review is a mother/father review team that is always on the go with children, whether that is around town, jet setting, or exploring the great outdoors. Equally at home in the big city or enjoying all that the Northwest has to offer, you will find them all around town and on Rave and Review daily.

<img src="http://islandlife808.com/wp-content/themes/lifestyle_30/images/leanne.png">

Source: http://islandlife808.com/shopping/sims-3-and-sims-3-pets/

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Sunday, December 4, 2011

Publishers warm to e-books on their own terms (Reuters)

PARIS (Reuters) ? Book publishers have survived the first stage of a digital revolution in better shape than the music industry and are now embracing the shift to e-books in their search for new revenue streams and lower costs.

The industry has been battered this year by a significant shift from physical books to e-books that has transferred power to Internet retailers led by Amazon and helped put some high-street chains like Borders out of business.

Publishers have fought and won for now a key battle to keep pricing control over their titles, unlike the music industry, which a decade ago allowed Apple to impose a flat rate of $0.99 on music tracks in its iTunes store.

Penguin and Hachette told Reuters this week they were quite optimistic that e-books would help them increase profitability and reach bigger audiences, although they had not yet figured out how to sell digital extras to readers.

"The consumer sort of slightly shrugs his shoulders and says: 'Well, that's marvelous but that's not something I'm going to pay for very much,'" Penguin Chief Executive John Makinson told the Reuters Global Media Summit.

As an example, he said Penguin had created an e-book of Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice enhanced with clips from the Hollywood movie with Keira Knightley, as well as recipes and dance moves from the period, to no avail.

Children, he added, had taken more quickly to extra features, especially on touch screens like Apple's iPad. Many classic kids' books such as Alice in Wonderland and the Cat in the Hat have been rejuvenated in the digital form with added animation and games.

Hachette CEO Arnaud Nourry agreed that readers of e-books had proven conservative so far.

"Customers do not want these enriched things that we are talking about all day," he said. "I don't think we would have sold more Dan Brown books with recipes."

The shift to e-books, which is most advanced in the United States where Amazon catalyzed the market with its Kindle device and store four years ago, has already touched off changes to publishers' business models, distribution systems and costs.

While e-book prices are on average 20-30 percent lower than those of physical books, they save publishers the cost of storing and moving books around, and reduce the working capital tied up in inventory.

In markets where book prices are not regulated by law, including the United States and Britain, this has already made e-books more profitable for publishers than print books.

In regulated markets like France and Germany where laws prevent book stores and supermarkets from discounting in an effort to protect local culture and prevent the book from being a commodity like any other, print books are still more profitable.

In the United States, e-books account for about 25 percent of book sales by volume and 20 percent by revenue. In Britain, the figure is about 10 percent by volume, while the rest of Europe and Asia excluding Japan are just getting off the ground.

Germany, the world's second-biggest book market after the United States, was the first in continental Europe to get the Kindle and local language titles in April. Amazon launched the Kindle in France in October, and in Spain and Italy this week.

"We're just at the beginning of the curve," Nourry said.

Publishers have reached a kind of peace for now in their often stormy relationships with Internet giants like Amazon and Google, who were largely responsible for bringing the digital revolution to the world of books.

Google enraged publishers and authors in 2004 with a controversial book-scanning project it billed as an effort to make the content of the world's libraries available to all but was seen by opponents as intellectual property theft.

U.S. publishers and authors took Google to court over the matter in 2005. The parties have since tried to settle the case but the issue has meantime escalated and a U.S. judge rejected it in March.

Google has meanwhile scanned more than 13 million books and reached a pragmatic compromise with publishers and authors in many countries.

With Amazon, publishers fought an intense battle over how e-book prices would be set, opposing the Internet retailer's effort to impose $9.99 as a standard for new titles on the Kindle, Apple iTunes-style.

Ironically, it was only the emergence last year of Apple with its iPad as a counterweight to Amazon that allowed the so-called "Big Six" publishers to win back control of pricing.

In what was a major shift for the industry, the publishers, determined to avoid the mistakes made by the music industry, imposed an "agency model" in which they set their own prices.

In the traditional "wholesale model" prevalent in non-regulated book markets like the United States, publishers set a recommended retail price but the seller is then free to offer deep discounts.

With these fights behind them, Penguin and Hachette seemed to have mellowed in their attitude to their one-time foes.

"We had to bring Amazon into line and eventually we did," said Makinson. "The results have been good."

He said there was now a very competitive market in the U.S. with Google's eBookstore, Apple's iBookstore and Barnes & Noble's Nook -- to the advantage of publishers.

Hachette's Nourry, once one of Google's fiercest opponents during the book scanning row, is today rooting for the search engine company to sell more books: "I would love to see Google be a stronger animal," he said.

The evolution of the book market is still in its early days, however, and issues like piracy are re-emerging as digital booksellers try to replicate features popular with book-lovers, such as lending, in the digital world.

A new front has recently opened over Amazon's new Kindle lending library, which allows members of the website's loyalty program known as Prime to borrow a book every month for free.

The Big Six -- Hachette, HarperCollins, MacMillan, Penguin, Random House and Simon & Schuster -- have all refused to join the lending library, arguing that it devalues books in the eyes of customers.

Nourry said Hachette would not join the program even if Amazon offered it a slice of revenue from the lending.

"It's not that I am against libraries, or a book being sold and then read by 10 different people, but it's clearly a way invented by retailers to change the balance of power."

Makinson said Penguin would continue to talk with Amazon about the lending library concept, but that the issue was as much about the risk of piracy as pricing.

"Amazon is embarking on new initiatives that could put file security at risk and that would be not good for anyone."

Nourry said he would like to one day find a way for readers to lend each other e-books, but said copyright protection was currently more important as the industry's new business models were still fragile.

"My business consists of selling books," he said. "People who buy Kindles every 18 months and iPads for $600 -- they don't need our help."

(Reporting by Gwenaelle Barzic, Kate Holton, and Marie Mawad; Editing by Erica Billingham)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/digitalmusic/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111202/media_nm/us_media_summit_ebooks

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Saturday, December 3, 2011

Miss. town getting natural gas after long outage (AP)

JACKSON, Miss. ? People in a struggling Mississippi Delta town will soon have natural gas service after six months of heating bath water on electric stoves or cooking on hot plates because the town failed to pay its gas supplier for years.

Utility crews are restoring service in Winstonville this week just as the first blast of wintry air is moving across the rural flatlands.

Willie Wilson, 66, said he's looking forward to soaking under a good, hot shower. The semi-retired car salesman said Thursday that life without natural gas has been inconvenient for him and his wife: "I wouldn't wish it on anybody."

The town of 191 residents accumulated $611,718 in unpaid bills over 15 years to a natural gas supplier, Texas Gas Transmission. Residents were paying their bills, but for years the municipal gas system was not paying the supplier, said Cory Horton, spokesman for U.S. Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss.

Texas Gas cut off Winstonville's service May 27, saying it had tried for years to collect payments.

With nighttime temperatures dipping below freezing this week, those without natural gas service have relied on electric space heaters, electric blankets or kerosene heaters, Mayor Henry Perkins Jr. said.

"We have some trials and tribulations," Perkins told The Associated Press. "It's been really hard, especially when you're dealing with a lot of elderly people."

Winstonville is a community of modest brick homes and a couple of mom-and-pop stores about 130 miles northwest of Jackson along U.S. Highway 61, also known as the Blues Highway. The area's median household income is $11,125, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Court records show Winstonville has had financial problems for at least two decades, and filed for bankruptcy in 1997.

Thompson said he and the Mississippi Public Service Commission, which regulates utilities, finalized a deal this week to get Winstonville's natural gas service turned on by a different company, Atmos Energy.

"It was certainly a first for me, to have a whole town lose service," said Public Service Commissioner Lynn Posey, whose central district includes Winstonville.

Atmos is taking over ownership and operation of Winstonville's natural gas system, which had been owned and operated by the town. Atmos crews are in town this week, testing the pressure in gas lines and restoring service.

Texas Gas agreed not to place a lien on the system or ask Atmos to pay Winstonville's accumulated debt, said Liz Johnson, corporate communications director for Boardwalk Pipeline Partners, the parent company of Texas Gas. She told AP that Texas Gas still plans to pursue payment from Winstonville.

"Our company has been negotiating with the city for a while to try to work out a payment situation," Johnson said.

Texas Gas said in a statement that Winstonville has made only "sporadic, partial" payments since 1996. From mid-2009 to mid-2011, the company said the town paid only about 15.1 percent of the bills it incurred to the company.

Before cutting off Winstonville's service, Texas Gas gave notice of its plans to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.

"Terminating service is not an option that we take lightly," David Moseley, vice president of southern markets for Texas Gas, said in a statement in June. "We reached out to community officials many times over the years, especially over the past six months, but the town did not respond to our requests to resolve this matter in an equitable manner."

Perkins said he inherited the natural gas system's debt when he became mayor after winning a special election in late 2007. The mayor's job was open because Milton Tutwiler has resigned in September 2007, four months after being convicted on federal charges of conspiracy, misapplication of grant money and filing a false document involving a $1.3 million grant from Mid-Delta Empowerment Zone Alliance.

Tutwiler died in 2008. A photo on Winstonville's website shows the town's multipurpose building is named for him.

Thompson said this week that he contacted several government agencies to ease Winstonville's financial problems. The town also owed $323,759 to the USDA for a community facilities loan. After negotiations, the USDA agreed to let Winstonville pay $100 to clear its obligation for the loan, Thompson's staff said.

"It took a little while to resolve this," Thompson said. "There were so many people involved in the system. Everybody had had to agree to their part of it."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/science/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111201/ap_on_re_us/us_mississippi_utility_woes

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Kim abused Kris? Dr. Drew thinks so

By Ree Hines

Troubles between Kim Kardashian and her soon-to-be ex-husband Kris Humphries were evident on Sunday night?s season premiere of ?Kim and Kourtney Take New York.? There was the frequent bickering, the heated disagreement on the subject of nude yoga and of particular interest to celebrity psychiatrist Dr. Drew Pinsky, a fight over a broken toenail that ended in a punch.

The wounded nail belonged to Kardashian and the subject of the punch was accidental nail-masher Humphries, and according to Pinsky, the exchange was clear evidence of abuse.

?What you are seeing there is domestic violence,? he said as he repeatedly played the clip for his ?Dr. Drew? audience to see. ?A lot of people watching this may not understand this, and I get that. It looks playful. What?s the big deal? It is a massive deal and it?s important."

It?s not that the doctor is worried for the couple. Instead, Pinsky?s worried about the message Kardashian?s actions send to viewers.

?It?s important for everyone else,? he said. ?For Kris and Kim, they?re separating. That?s over with. This doesn?t need to be reported or anything, but anybody listening at home and viewing this has to understand the spectrum of domestic violence, and this is incontrovertible evidence of someone engaged in a domestic violence relationship.?

And for those that would excuse Kardashian simply because she?s a fraction of the size of the towering basketball player she briefly wed, Pinsky warned that it?s no excuse.

?It?s illegal, and it goes to a bad place,? he stressed. ?It progresses. It starts and goes ? it doesn?t stay right there. The size, gender does not matter. It goes to a horrible, horrible place.?

Neither Kardashian nor Humphries responded to Pinsky?s efforts to reach them about his concerns.

What do you think? Is Dr. Drew right? Did Kim cross the line when she threw the punch? Share your thoughts on our Facebook page.

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Related content:

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Source: http://theclicker.today.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/11/30/9117246-dr-drew-accuses-kim-kardashian-of-domestic-violence-against-kris

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Friday, December 2, 2011

Color Efex Pro 4

Editor's Note: This product has not yet been tested. The following coverage is based on information provided by the manufacturer or developer.

One of the biggest names in photo software doesn't actually make a popular photo editing application, but instead makes plug-ins for the 800-pound gorilla of image editing?Adobe Photoshop. And one of Nik Software's most powerful and popular plug-ins, Color Efex Pro, has been updated to version 4. The plug-in adds filters to Photoshop (and to Lightroom and Photoshop Elements, too, for that matter) for retouching and creative enhancements.

New image filters added to Color Efex Pro 4's full assortment of 55 include Detail Extractor, Vintage Film Efex, and Image Borders. The update also adds stackable filter combinations, visual presets, filter recipes. A new history browser lets you compare previous edits with the image's current state. Interface improvements have also been made to filters, zoom controls, and shortcut keys.

The software is available in a Complete Edition that includes all 55 filters for $199.95 and a Select Edition that includes 26 filters for $99.95. Upgrading to the full edition from version 2 or 3 costs $99.95.? Color Efex Pro 4 is Windows and Mac compatible and installs as a 32-bit and 64-bit plug-in for Adobe Photoshop CS4 or later, Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 2.6 or later, Adobe Photoshop Elements 8 or later, or Apple Aperture? 2.1.4 or later.

More Photo Editing Software Reviews:

??? ACDSee 14
??? Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 3.5
??? Serif PhotoPlus X5
??? Corel PaintShop Pro X4
??? Adobe Photoshop Elements 10
?? more

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/o90JlpF5RJo/0,2817,2397053,00.asp

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Fukushima Earthquake Moved Seafloor Half a Football Field

News | More Science

The massive shift, laterally and upward, caused the epic March 2011 tsunami


The March 2011 Tohoku-Oki earthquake that decimated Japan and its Fukushima nuclear reactors with a monster tsunami altered the seafloor off the country?s eastern coast much more than scientists had thought. Analysis released today in the journal Science indicates the ocean bed moved as much as 50 meters laterally and 16 meters vertically. The magnitude 9.0 quake occurred close to the nearby Japan Trench that runs north to south in the Pacific Ocean (dark blue line on the map below).

The trench exists because the oceanic Pacific Plate (dark blue on map below) is moving westward, hitting and bending down under the continental Okhotsk Plate (light blue) from which Japan rises (green, brown). This ?subduction? action creates tension within the tectonic plates, which is occasionally released in the form of earthquakes.

Although measurements from satellites and seismic ground sensors had indicated the Okhotsk Plate moved after the 9.0 temblor on March 11, the extent of the movement was not clear. Researchers at the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology compared new seafloor maps made of the region this year with maps made in 1999 and were surprised by the extent of motion. For example, data along one transect (yellow marker, below) near the quake?s epicenter (black ?x? on the map) indicated that the Okhotsk plate moved 50 meters east-southeast toward the trench.

Comparison of depth data showed that the earthquake itself lifted the Okhotsk plate 10 meters where the plate dives deep toward the trench (yellow to purple color, at center, below). The plate?s lateral shift also caused it to tip up another four to six meters there. ?We think that the additional uplift contributed to the generation of the pulsating pattern of tsunami waves,? Toshiya Fujiwara, one of the lead researchers, wrote in an email.

So if the Okhotsk plate shifted 50 meters at the trench, what happened at Japan?s eastern shore? According to Fujiwara, data from various Japanese agencies and universities shows that the seafloor at the Tohoku shore moved 5 meters seaward. Offshore, the plate shifted from 15 to 31 meters in the same east-southeast direction, and close to the trench it moved 50 meters. The gradually increasing displacement suggests that the plate was actually stretched from the shore toward the trench, changing local stress patterns along the way. The many large aftershocks that occurred (red circles, below; yellow is the quake epicenter) are evidence of the stretching, Fujiwara noted.

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Map credits (top to bottom): Captain Blood and Wikimedia Atlas of the World (Japan and Asia); NOAA (plates); Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (trench map and horizontal displacement graphic); ZENRIN and Google Maps (aftershocks).

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Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=37d155e16d17de12654d206db2f42fa0

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