Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Hacker Barnaby Jack dies in San Francisco aged 35



Jack, who became famous after demonstrating an ATM hack, died on Thursday - but coroners did not give details



Barnaby Jack, a hacker who was due to present his findings on the security vulnerabilities of implanted medical devices, has died.



The San Francisco medical examiner's office said Jack, 35, died in the city on Thursday - but did not provide details on the circumstances surrounding his death.



Jack had exposed a security flaw in insulin pumps that could be made to dispense a fatal dose by a hacker 300ft away, pushing some medical companies to review the security of these devices.



He was also a popular and respected figure in the information security scene. Within that small scene, reverse engineers are especially close, said Matthieu Suiche, a friend of Jack's and chief scientist at CloudVolumes Inc in an email. "We pretty much all know each other, or have lots of common friends," Suiche said. "It's almost like we all grew up together."



He added: "There isn't much to say except that Barnaby was one of the rare people in InfoSec who was a brilliant researcher but also a good friend to many of us."



Suiche met Jack at the Black Hat conference a few years ago and said they had been really good friends since. He said he had drinks with Jack and his girlfriend in San Francisco just over a week ago.



He called his friend "brilliant", and said Jack's latest research on medical devices could help save the lives of many people. "In this world full of people fearfully complying and worrying, very few people are crazy enough to challenge the rules, to approach life in an unconventional paradigm and to speak up to contribute to change this world," Suiche said.



Jack was due to speak at the Black Hat conference, which starts Saturday in Las Vegas. His presentation, "Implantable medical devices: hacking humans," would have explained how these devices could be compromised and would have suggested ways to improve device security.



Black Hat said the room his discussion was meant to take place will instead be used as a place for his friends and colleagues to gather and remember him on 1 August, when the session was set to take place.



Black Hat said in a statement:



We have lost a member of our family. Everyone would agree that the life and work of Barnaby Jack are legendary and irreplaceable. Barnaby had the ability to take complex technology and intricate research and make it tangible and accessible for everyone to learn and grow from. Beyond his work in our industry, Barnaby was an incredibly warm hearted and welcoming individual with a passion for celebrating life. We all have a hilarious and upbeat story about Barnaby. He is truly a shining example of what we love about this community.



Black Hat will not be replacing Barnaby's talk on Thursday, Aug. 1. No one could possibly replace him, nor would we want them to. The community needs time to process this loss. The hour will be left vacant as a time to commemorate his life and work, and we welcome our attendees to come and share in what we hope to be a celebration of his life. Barnaby Jack meant so much to so many people, and we hope this forum will offer an opportunity for us all to recognize the legacy that he leaves behind.



Our deepest sympathies go out to Barnaby Jack's family and loved ones. Words cannot adequately describe how much he will be missed, but it is certain that Barnaby will NEVER be forgotten.



At the time of his death, Jack was director of embedded security research at security firm IOActive. On Twitter, the company said: "Lost but never forgotten our beloved pirate, Barnaby Jack has passed. He was a master hacker and dear friend. Here's to you Barnes!"


New York's Grand Central – and nine other beautiful train stations | Jason Farago


Jason Farago: The notoriously ugly Penn station has a chance to be reborn, but here are 10 termini which need no beautification at all


Jason Farago







Monday, December 30, 2013

Russia faces vodka boycott in backlash against anti-gay law



LGBT activists target brands including Stolichnaya and Russian Standard in response to ban on 'gay propaganda'



There's nothing more Russian than vodka, so when gay and lesbian activists decided to protest against the country's persecution of homosexuals it made sense to target its most famous drink.



The US sex writer Dan Savage, famous for his online campaign against the homophobic senator Rick Santorum, called for a vodka boycott to draw attention to new laws allowing police officers to arrest tourists and foreign nationals they suspect of being homosexual or "pro-gay".



"To show our solidarity with Russian queers and their allies and to help to draw international attention to the persecution of gay men, lesbians, bisexuals, trans people and straight allies in Vladimir Putin's increasingly fascistic Russia: dump Russian vodka," Savage wrote on his blog, He singled out the brands Stolichnaya and Russian Standard, coining the hashtag #DumpStoli for the campaign, which has been backed by Queer Nation and the Russian-American group Rusa LGBT.



Savage said attacks on LGBT people in Russia were escalating, and criticised the state for banning gay pride marches in Moscow and St Petersburg.



Six bars in Chicago announced they would stop selling Russian products, and a seventh bar said it had withdrawn Stolichnaya, according to Windy City Times, a Chicago LGBT newspaper.



The campaign seemed to have an instant success when the manufacturers of Stolichnaya criticised Russia's record on lesbian and gay rights.



In an open letter published this week, Val Mendeleev, the head of the SPI group, condemned the Russian government for "limiting the rights of the LGBT community" and noted that the Russian state has no ownership or control of the brand, which is produced in Latvia.



On its Facebook page, the company posted a multicoloured banner reading: "Stolichnaya Premium Vodka stands strong and proud with the global LGBT community against the actions and beliefs of the Russian government."



Stolichnaya, with its distinctive red-and-white label, was produced by the state in Soviet times and was reportedly the favourite vodka of Boris Yeltsin. After an attempt by the Russian state to regain the brand name in the 2000s, SPI Group, which is based in Luxembourg, has produced Stolichnaya in Latvia using Russian ingredients. Meanwhile, the state-owned Soyuzplodimport produces a nearly identical vodka in Russia.



Russia's leading gay rights activist said the boycott was misguided.



"They mixed everything up. Stolichnaya isn't Russian," said the lawyer Nikolai Alekseev, head of the Moscow Pride organising committee.



"This is all good for attracting attention to the situation in Russia, like any other action, such as boycott of the Olympics, but it will not drastically change anything," he added.



Unlike Stolichnaya, Russian Standard vodka is produced in Russia and is owned by the Russian oligarch Roustam Tariko. A spokesman for the company declined to comment.



In June Russia's parliament unanimously passed a law banning the spreading of "propaganda of non-traditional sexual relations" among minors, prompting calls for other countries to boycott the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi.



The law in effect makes it illegal to equate straight and gay relationships, and to distribute material on gay rights. It introduces fines for individuals and media groups found guilty of breaking the law, as well as special fines for foreigners. Four Dutch activists were charged in Murmansk this week under the law.



This is not Savage's first controversial LGBT campaign: in 2003, he held a contest to create a definition for "santorum" after Santorum made comments critical of gay marriage. The new word was defined as "the frothy mixture of lube and faecal matter that is sometimes the byproduct of anal sex".


US will not seek death penalty for Edward Snowden, Holder tells Russia



Reports this week claimed Snowden had applied for asylum in Russia because he feared torture if he was returned to US



The US has told the Russian government that it will not seek the death penalty for Edward Snowden should he be extradited, in an attempt to prevent Moscow from granting asylum to the former National Security Agency contractor.



In a letter sent this week, US attorney general Eric Holder told his Russian counterpart that the charges faced by Snowden do not carry the death penalty. Holder added that the US "would not seek the death penalty even if Mr Snowden were charged with additional, death penalty-eligible crimes".



Holder said he had sent the letter, addressed to Alexander Vladimirovich, Russia's minister of justice, in response to reports that Snowden had applied for temporary asylum in Russia "on the grounds that if he were returned to the United States, he would be tortured and would face the death penalty".



"These claims are entirely without merit," Holder said. In addition to his assurance that Snowden would not face capital punishment, the attorney general wrote: "Torture is unlawful in the United States."



In the letter, released by the US Department of Justice on Friday, Holder added: "We believe that these assurances eliminate these asserted grounds for Mr Snowden's claim that he should be treated as a refugee or granted asylum, temporary or otherwise."



The US has been seeking Snowden's extradition to face felony charges for leaking details of NSA surveillance programmes. There were authoritative reports on Wednesday that authorities in Moscow had granted Snowden permission to stay in Russia temporarily, but when Snowden's lawyer, Anatoly Kucherena, arrived to meet his client at Sheremetyevo airport, he said the papers were not yet ready.



Kucherena, who has close links to the Kremlin, said Snowden would stay in the airport's transit zone, where he has been in limbo since arriving from Hong Kong on 23 June, for the near future.



The letter from Holder, and the apparent glitch in Snowden's asylum application, suggest that Snowden's fate is far from secure.



But a spokesman for President Vladimir Putin insisted Russia has not budged from its refusal to extradite Snowden. Asked by a reporter on Friday whether the government's position had changed, Dmitry Peskov told Russian news agencies that "Russia has never extradited anyone and never will." Putin has previously insisted Russia will not extradite Snowden to the US. There is no US-Russia extradition treaty.



Putin's statement still leaves the Russian authorities room for manoeuvre, however, as Snowden is not technically on Russian soil.



Peskov said that Putin is not involved in reviewing Snowden's application or involved in discussions about the whistleblower's future with the US, though he said the Russian security service, the FSB, had been in touch with the FBI.



Speaking on Wednesday, Snowden's lawyer said he was hoped to settle in Russia. "[Snowden] wants to find work in Russia, travel and somehow create a life for himself," Kucherena told the television station Rossiya 24. He said Snowden had already begun learning Russian.



There is support among some Russian politicians for Snowden to be allowed to stay in the country. The speaker of the Russian parliament, Sergei Naryshkin, has said Snowden should be granted asylum to protect him from the death penalty.



The letter from Holder was designed to allay those fears and negate the grounds for which Snowden as allegedly applied for asylum in Russia. The attorney general said that if Snowden returned to the US he would "promptly be brought before a civilian court" and would receive "all the protections that United States law provides".



"Any questioning of Mr Snowden could be conducted only with his consent: his participation would be entirely voluntary, and his legal counsel would be present should he wish it," Holder said.



He added that despite Snowden's passport being revoked he "remains a US citizen" and said the US would facilitate a direct return to the country.



Germany's president, who helped expose the workings of East Germany's Stasi secret police, waded into the row on Friday. President Joachim Gauck, whose role is largely symbolic, said whistleblowers such as Snowden deserved respect for defending freedom.



"The fear that our telephones or mails are recorded and stored by foreign intelligence services is a constraint on the feeling of freedom and then the danger grows that freedom itself is damaged," Gauck said.


Sunday, December 29, 2013

The Heartwarming Adventures of #SFBatkid and the Thrill of the Hunt for Carmen Sandiego


BatKID



Patricia Wilson


When done well, blending fiction with reality is one of those things that makes social media worth all the hype. In San Francisco today, a Make-a-Wish campaign to turn a five-year-old with leukemia into a superhero was been widely publicized by local outlets, drawing crowds of thousands to see his adventures in person, and is blowing up on Twitter and Facebook today with the hashtag #SFBatkid.



(It's crazy; look at the tweets fly by. Internet phenomena seem to get more viral by the day.)



SFbatkid


So far, Batkid (a.k.a. Miles Scott) saved a damsel in distress on the cable car tracks and helped apprehend the Riddler with the help of Batman and local police, all the while being cheered by crowds. Now, a flash mob has alerted Batkid that Penguin kidnapped the Giants' Lou Seal at AT&T Park, and then Batkid will head to City Hall where the mayor will give him a key to Gotham. You can follow the heartwearming adventure on Storify and via live video coverage.



If you're not in San Francisco, or if you tune in after the festivities have finished, there's another caper you can follow online. This one requires less Kleenex.



The social media team at PBS has revived Carmen Sandiego, the fictional international criminal, for a weekly geography game on Twitter, Tumblr and Instagram. It's all tied together by the hashtag #CatchingCarmen and a RebelMouse page that aggregates the clues and the winning responses.



Sandiego starred in a boxed computer software geography game in the 1980s and 1990s as well as a televised kids' game show. For nerdy kids who grew up in that era watching public television, this is a major nostalgia trigger.



CarmenSandiego


PBS is playing up the nostalgia by tying into the Internet tradition of posting old photos on so-called #ThrowbackThursday. So far, the clues led gumshoes to the Lincoln Memorial and Red Rocks Amphitheater. And they're not necessarily easy or obvious; an envelope with a return address including the zip code 82664 was meant to signify the date the Beatles played Red Rock: August 26, 1964.



PBS digital marketing director Kevin Dando said in an interview today that the game isn't meant to promote anything (besides PBS), as there's no planned revival of the TV show. The stunt is planned to last eight weeks, and local PBS stations are participating by providing footage of the locations that Dando's team can green-screen their Sandiego onto.



Chasing Carmen Sandiego won't make you feel better about humanity the way Batkid will, but it's just plain fun.


Ballmer on Ballmer: His Exit From Microsoft


Steve Ballmer paced his corner office on a foggy January morning here, listening through loudspeakers to his directors' voices on a call that would set in motion the end of his 13-year reign as Microsoft Corp.'s chief executive.



Microsoft lagged behind Apple Inc. and Google Inc. in important consumer markets, despite its formidable software revenue. Mr. Ballmer tried to spell out his plan to remake Microsoft, but a director cut him off, telling him he was moving too slowly.



"Hey, dude, let's get on with it," lead director John Thompson says he told him. "We're in suspended animation." Mr. Ballmer says he replied that he could move faster.



Read the rest of this post on the original site


Saturday, December 28, 2013

Twitter's TV Guide Experiment Gets a Little Closer to Prime Time


vintage_tv_ad


Twitter often describes itself as a digital town square. But that's not the only metaphor it likes: Twitter is also intent on becoming a TV Guide.



Dick Costolo and company talked a lot about the Twitter + TV concept in the runup to their IPO, but the idea is still a work in progress. You can get a hint of Twitter's ambitions in its latest mobile app overhaul.



You'll have to look hard, though:


  • Get the newest version of Twitter's iOS and Android apps.
  • Click on the "Discover" tab.
  • Click on the "Trending" button.
  • Scroll down.
  • Keep scrolling.
  • Keep scrolling ...

Got it? Tucked away in the corner of its app, Twitter is now promoting TV shows to its users, supposedly based on the amount of chatter they are generating on the service (click images to enlarge).



twitter tv sons of anarchy


twitter tv supernatural


twitter tv voice




A handful of Twitter users saw these banners this summer, when Twitter tried a test run. Now all of you can see them.



The Twitter TV promotions aren't formal ads, though you could easily imagine a way Twitter might charge for them, directly or indirectly. More important to Twitter is the idea that it can drive traffic to TV shows (which it is also trying to do with Comcast and the cable company's "Seeit" buttons).



Twitter also likes the notion that TV shows are something that appeal to lots of mainstream users - the kind it would very much like to recruit and keep on the service.



So what will all of that mean? Not much, yet: If Twitter was really serious about this stuff, it would move it out of a subfolder in a section of the app normal people don't ever visit. So it's safe to assume this is still in the experimental phase.



On the other hand, the fact that Twitter is now experimenting where everyone can see its work, instead of a tiny subset of its users, means ... something. The trick is figuring out how to surface this stuff in a way that doesn't dismay its current users, and, more importantly, in a way that makes sense to new users, who Twitter really needs.



My hunch: Twitter eventually marries TV recommendations with the mechanics of Magic Recs and Event Parrot, two other Twitter experiments that deliver information - interesting users, or interesting news - to users who have asked for it.


Lytro Raises $40 Million to Keep Its Dream of Changing Photography in Focus


Camera startup Lytro is announcing $40 million in new funding that it said will help it move faster and reach its broader goals of reshaping photography.



lytrowalt1




The round of funding is being led by new investor North Bridge Venture Partners, with existing backers Andreessen Horowitz, New Enterprise Associates and Greylock Partners also adding to their investments.



CEO Jason Rosenthal told AllThingsD that Lytro will use the money to help fund a new generation of Lytro hardware. Thus far the company has released just the single model of its light-field camera which debuted two years ago, though it has added a number of new features via software updates. Last week, for example, the company announced the ability to view 3-D images from any picture taken with a Lytro camera.



"With the first generation of Lytro, there were just a lot of things to be figured out and understood and done," Rosenthal said, adding that the company now has the technology more mature and the infrastructure and team in place to move more quickly. "What you should see from us is just a faster pace of innovation than we have been able to accomplish before."



Rosenthal said the company wants to move in reasonably short order into professional photography, motion picture cameras and making its existing consumer products thinner, cheaper and lighter.



"We definitely won't get to them all in 18 months, but we will get to more than one," he said.



Lytro had some job cuts and executive departures earlier this year, but Rosenthal said the company has been hiring for the last couple months as the funding round came together.



The company hasn't released sales figures, though Rosenthal insists sales this year are ahead of the company's internal plan.


Friday, December 27, 2013

Second Screen TV Startup Wywy Raises $7M For International Growth

wywy



Wywy, a German company promising to help monetize TV activity on mobile devices, is announcing that it has raised $7 million in Series B funding.



According to the wywy website, the company's history goes back to 2001, with video and audio detection technology, but it only launched its second screen products last year. Those products include multi-screen ad synchronization, so that mobile and tablet users see online advertising that corresponds to the commercial they're seeing on TV; real-time TV campaign tracking; and content sync technology for second screen apps.



The company also offers an app of its own, but it sounds like that's just meant to showcase wywy's technology for potential customers.



The new funding follows a $3.1 million Series A last year and comes from existing investors Cipio Partners. Wywy says it currently supports 200 channels in five countries, and one of the big goals is to expand in Europe and the United States.



"Today, using a Second Screen device in parallel to watching TV has become the norm," said Cipio managing partner Werner Dreesbach in the funding release. "It is clear that TV advertisers require new approaches to ensure the effectiveness of their campaigns. wywy's huge success with media agencies and TV advertisers in Germany made the decision to internationalize easy."




Apple Finally Signs Long-Awaited Deal To Sell iPhones On China Mobile’s Network

apple china shanghai



China Mobile has finally signed a deal to offer Apple iPhones on its network, an agreement that took years to reach, reports the Wall Street Journal. China Mobile is the world's largest mobile carrier, with more than 700 million subscribers, and is the last of China's three major carriers to offer the iPhone. We have emailed Apple and China Mobile for more information.



The reported deal comes after two months of signs that the rollout of iPhone's on China Mobiles network is imminent. The launch date is expected to coincide with the Dec. 18 China Mobile conference in Guangzhou, when the carrier is supposed to reveal more information about its new 4G LTE network.



In September, the WSJ reported that Apple is preparing to ship the iPhone 5S and 5C to China Mobile and earlier this week, China Mobile began quietly taking pre-orders for both models on a website owned by one of its subsidiaries.



China's top three carriers recently received licenses from the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology to start operating 4G networks. In September, reports emerged that Apple's newest iPhone models will be compatible with China Mobile's network. The completion of its 4G network was an important sticking point for China Mobile to agree to start selling iPhones. One of the major roadblocks was that China Mobile operates on a different 3G standard that was developed in part by the Chinese government, and Apple said that the carrier's proprietary network as too unreliable. China Mobile, on the other hand, did not want to agree to Apple's sales volume guarantees.



China is currently Apple's third biggest market and CEO Tim Cook has said he anticipates it will eventually become the company's largest. But over the past year, Apple has quickly lost market share there to Android handsets from Samsung and domestic handset makers, as its revenue also slowed down in the U.S. But deal with China Mobile may give it a boost. Research firm Trefis says the deal with the carrier may result in the sale of an additional 20 million iPhones in 2014, a 17% increase from the year before.




Thursday, December 26, 2013

Bitcoin Value Loses Its Mind As Trading Lags On The Mt.Gox Exchange

2013-12-06_11h36_48



Bitcoin is acting up at the moment. Following a steep decline that saw the currency trade at prices not seen since late November, trading of Bitcoin on the Mt.Gox exchange has gone crackerdog.



It has fallen into a pattern of very rapid rises and falls that end and begin in a very tight, specific trading range. The following is a chart using one-minute ticks to track the price of Bitcoin on the Mt.Gox exchange for today:



2013-12-06_11h26_36




Trading on Mt.Gox is also seeing massive delays, with the current lag listed as almost 40 minutes. So, I doubt that anyone has an idea about what is going on.



Other Bitcoin exchanges, such as Btc-e are displaying similar prices for the currency, so the trading price on Mt.Gox isn't itself too batty. Instead, current trading patterns themselves are inscrutable, unless we presume some sort of algorithmic allergic reaction to current trading lag. In the meantime, if you can get your trades through, there is likely a decent arbitrage possibility at play, though trading lag times could make any such activity incredibly risky.



Coinbase has Bitcoin at $848, and Btc-e at $865. The currency was over the $1,000 mark yesterday. Bitcoin: Still not that mature.


China


While Bitcoin works through whatever bug or issue is causing its current trading pattern, we need to keep in mind the broader context of the current market position of the currency. A recent decision by the Chinese government to ban financial institutions from trading in the currency cut at its potential to become a global repository for value outside of the control of nation states.



Today, news that Baidu has ceased to accept Bitcoin is pushing the currency's value down. To lose a company like Baidu at once lowers the inherent utility of Bitcoin, and also directly contravenes the narrative that Bitcoin was starting to find wide integration into the world of e-commerce, thus granting it legitimacy, and perhaps improved stability.



Chinese demand has been a key supplier of recently robust demand for Bitcoin, comprising an increasing percentage of Bitcoin's trading volume. If that driver slips, so too could the value, and market interest in Bitcoin.



Bitcoin has fallen from over $1,200 since the Chinese news cycle broke. That's a steep decline - about 30 percent - in a few days. The question now becomes what will bring upside back to Bitcoin?



Top Image Credit: Flickr




Gift Guide: Five Kitchen Gadgets Your Foodie Will Eat Right Up

giftguide-food



More food is consumed during the holiday season than at any other time. But that's the thing with food; you can't stay full forever. And so these gadgets, services and tools should serve your food-friendly loved ones quite handily. We'll cover a range of products, including an ingredient-delivery service, a magical scale that measures the nutrition of your food, and one very special ice cube.



Everyone from a master chef to a home cook should have a blast with this gift guide, so let's waste no more time and crack some eggs.


Prep Pad from The Orange Chef ($150)


Counter Top BT scales




If you know or love a health nut, the Prep Pad is an easy, thoughtful gift. It's a Bluetooth-equipped scale that measures the weight of your food as well as its nutritional value, which is then relayed to the user through an app. Simply input the type of food you're weighing, or scan the barcode, and see a pie chart of the nutrition you'll be consuming.



With an aluminum frame and a paper composite surface, which can be hygienically wiped down, the Prep Pad can handle any mess in any kitchen, and is accurate with the weight measurement to boot. It's got a heavy little price tag attached, at $150, and it doesn't ship until February, but it is worth the wait (ha!) and the cash for a chef obsessed with health.



You can pick up the Orange Chef Prep Pad here.


Impress Coffee Brewer ($39.95)


Screenshot 2013-12-06 14.05.19




Budding caffeine addicts are just one gadget away from a full-blown addiction. Meet the Impress single-cup Coffee Brewer from Gamila.



Single-cup coffee makers are becoming more popular, but those machines cost a pretty penny and take up a lot of space in the kitchen. But what if you could combine the single cup coffee maker with French press coffee-making techniques and a thermos to transport the coffee in? That would be pretty amazing, right?



Well, that's the Impress. It's kind of a pain to clean, as you need to scoop out the grounds and such, but it manages to keep 14 ounces of coffee warm for hours.



Pick one up here.


Plated ($15/plate)


Screenshot 2013-12-06 14.15.57




Grocery shopping, to some, is the worst part of cooking. Plated takes the guess work and leg work out of grocery shopping and cooking a nice meal. After a visit to the Plated website, you can shop around between various meals, ranging from things like Garlic-Herb Pork Chops with Roasted Sweet Potato Mash, Korean-Style Short Ribs with Asian Slaw and Sushi Rice, or vegetarian classics like Autumn Root Vegetable Chili with Cornbread Croutons.



Users are given everything they need, including ingredients and directions (but not cookware), to make an excellent meal and a fun experience. For $10/month, you can buy a membership that brings the price of a meal down to $12/plate, with a minimum of four plates per week. Otherwise meals are $15/plate with a minimum of four plates in one week.


Pucs ($19 for 3)




This is a design project that first blew up on Kickstarter and is now available for purchase in a number of different packages.



Anyone who enjoys a nice glass of whiskey on the rocks or simply hates a watered down drink should enjoy these stainless steel ice cubes. They stay at the bottom of the glass and hold temperature pretty well without watering down the drink. They even come with a handsome case you can slip into the freezer.



They're also able to bring down the temperature of hot beverages more quickly, and then be removed. They're a nice conversation starter to have around the house, and come at a reasonable price. Worth considering for a boss.


Egg Minder


eggminder




The Egg Minder is a product out of Quirky and GE that brings a little intelligence to the dairy section of your fridge. Bad eggs are the worst, and the Egg Minder aims to make sure you never experience them again. The smart tray indicates which egg in the tray is the oldest via LED lights, while a wireless connection to your smartphone keeps you in the loop on expiration dates. If you're running low, you'll get a push notification. Even better, you can check how many eggs you have and when they go bad from the grocery store.



The Egg Minder costs $69.99 and is available now.



You can check out our complete Holiday Gift Guide 2013 right here.



giftguide-banner





Wednesday, December 25, 2013

Appsfire is abandoning its popular app discovery service for iOS and Android to focus on mobile ad tech

appsfire lo 520x245 Appsfire is abandoning its popular app discovery service for iOS and Android to focus on mobile ad tech




Appsfire is ditching its renowned app discovery service on iOS and Android in order to shift its business towards its new developer-focused native mobile advertizing solution.



It's not like the Appsfire apps aren't popular any more. Across iOS and Android, the company has accrued over 12 million downloads and it still sees 8,000 to 10,000 new users each day. By tailoring its suggestions based on your interests, and serving up exclusive deals and promotions only available within Appsfire, it's become an invaluable tool for many mobile app junkies.



Just last month, Appsfire launched an SDK targeting app developers, which offered smart, unobtrusive push and in-app notifications, that take advantage of users' behaviour and location in the physical world.



Appsfire's CEO Ouriel Ohayon believes that "mobile ads suck" and in many cases, we would tend to agree. Executing apps properly, both in terms of user engagement and advertizing, will only become more important for app developers in the future. By placing its full focus on the issue, Appsfire stands a better chance of breaking through as a key service for developers, and effectively monetizing its new products and services.



Initially, Appsfire is pointing to its new ad unit called SUSHI, which was also announced last month and offers a quick, full-screen ad that users can quickly engage with or dismiss without leaving the current app. Ohayon says its next product, codenamed Ura Maki (or Inside Out), is coming "very soon."


Goodbye, Appsfire apps


The iOS and Android apps for Appsfire will disappear from their respective marketplace on December 19. Existing users can continue to use the app in its current form, but it won't be available for new users.



Why ditch these incredibly popular apps? It's just a matter of focus and resources, according to Ohayon:



"We may bring them back at a later stage. Indeed, we had tons of great ideas on how to dramatically improve the app discovery experience but we're going to save that effort for now. To be frank, we're a little bit heartbroken, for our users and for ourselves; but we just can't ride two horses at the same time and our apps have slowly become secondary to us for a while now in spite of all the recent updates."



Running a third-party app discovery service isn't easy either. Earlier this year, Appsfire competitor AppGratis ran into some hot water on the App Store, reportedly breaking some of Apple's related rules. It was pulled from the App Store in April, the same fate that befell another rival, AppShopper, a year ago.



Although Appsfire hasn't run into such problems, Ohayon said they haven't exactly been supportive either:



"While their spartan decision is often warranted with players that resort to shortcuts for easy and fast success, it does not look like Apple has figured out a real way to accommodate true value adding app discovery apps; either because they consider the App Store is "the ultimate solution" (it's far from being one), or by fear of losing that dominant market maker position."



So there you have it. The Appsfire apps for iOS and Android are effectively being shuttered, and the company is doubling down on native mobile advertising.



Looking ahead: Farewell Appsfire apps, Hello Appsfire Ads [Appsfire blog]


Relaxed will automatically respond to Twitter and Facebook messages on your behalf this Christmas

Autorelaxed 520x245 Relaxed will automatically respond to Twitter and Facebook messages on your behalf this Christmas




For some people, social media is baked into their lives - not a minute or a meal can pass without it being shared with the world. Those people won't want to use Relaxed, a tool that will respond to Facebook mentions and Tweets directed at you on your behalf.



There's not the most advanced set of responses to choose from (although you can of course set your own) and it will always include the autorelaxed.com URL at the end, but if you're the kind of person that likes to take a step back from social media over the holidays, it's a simple tool for setting something akin to an out of office email responder.



autorelaxed message 730x304 Relaxed will automatically respond to Twitter and Facebook messages on your behalf this Christmas




To use it, you just connect your chosen account(s) to the service, set a message and a date the auto-responder should start and stop. Once that's done, you're all set. It should be noted that while it will happily send your response to private (as well as public) messages on Facebook, it can't respond to Direct Messages on Twitter.



Whether or not it somewhat defeats the purpose of social media, by removing the social aspect, is up to you to decide.



Relaxed


Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Egypt: Two dead as rival rallies clash - live updates


Egypt is braced for more violence as the military urges its supporters onto the streets, while supporters of the ousted president Mohamed Morsi also plan to rally


Haroon SiddiqueBen Quinn











Spain train crash: wait to question driver



More details emerge of Francisco Garz n, 52, as he recovers in hospital after train crash that left at least 78 dead



The focus of the investigation into Spain's worst rail accident for 40 years remains on the train's driver, Francisco Garz n, who has been under arrest in hospital since Thursday evening.



Garz n has so far refused to answer police questions, the Press Association reported. He was now expected to questioned by a judge, it said.



At least 78 people died in the accident in which the high-speed Alvia 151 train careered into a sharp curve at more than twice the permitted speed before hurtling off the tracks. By Friday night, 31 were critically ill in hospital, some of them in comas.



Antonio del Amo, head of the Spanish national police's central forensic unit, said six of the bodies recovered from the wreckage had yet to be identified.



On Friday, more reports of Garz n's actions leading up to the crash began to emerge. The daily El Pa s reported that the experienced 52-year-old driver had received an order to reduce speed just seconds before the crash and had acknowledged it by pressing a button in the driver's cab. It remained unclear whether he had been unable or unwilling to apply the brakes on the train, which was running five minutes behind schedule.



A stream of leaked extracts from recorded conversations immediately following the disaster suggested that Garz n held himself responsible for what had happened.



While still trapped in the cockpit of his train, he was reported to have told the emergency service of the state-owned train operator, Renfe: "I hope there are no dead, because they will be on my conscience." He added: "I should have been going at 80 [kph] and I am going at 190." Garzon also reportedly said over and again: "We're human, we're human."



The Spanish news agency Europa Press reported that during the same conversation the driver had said: "I've fucked it. I want to die."



Contacted by telephone in hospital by the regional newspaper, La Voz de Galicia, Garz n refused to comment beyond saying, "You imagine how I am."



Details also began to emerge of Garz n's life. He is a lifelong railwayman and native of Galicia, living in the city of A Coru a with his widowed mother, who lost her other son in a car accident. But he was born in Monforte, an important regional rail centre, and has a flat there.



The son of a railway worker, Garz n was brought up in housing built for railway workers and went to a school run by Renfe. It was in Monforte, 70 miles inland from Santiago de Compostela, that he began working for the company in his early 20s.



He had 10 years' experience as a driver and Renfe's president, Julio G mez-Pomar Rodr guez, said Garz n had worked on the Ourense to Santiago line, where the accident took place, for more than a year.



Before returning to his native Galicia, he had worked on the line between Madrid and Barcelona, which is served by so-called AVE trains that can reach speeds of 310kph (193mph).



Julia Morais, a friend of his own age in his home town of Monforte de Lemos, told Reuters: "He was sensible and very good at his job. We don't know what could have happened."



Garz n's professionalism appeared to have been compromised by the discovery of a photograph he posted to his Facebook page showing his speedometer at 200kph. However, as a driver of high-speed trains he may have been on a stretch of the network where such a speed is permitted. The photograph was posted on 8 March 2012. It nevertheless surprised Garzon's friends. One wrote: "You're going like the bloody clappers, lad. Brake."



Garz n is suspected of criminal recklessness, but has not yet been charged. Spanish rail experts have argued that mere negligence cannot explain the crash: that the "black boxes" recovered from the train will show that a technical fault was partly - or perhaps entirely - to blame for what happened. Garz n reportedly tested negative for alcohol following the crash.



Garz n was led from the scene of the tragedy with his face covered in blood and given nine stitches to a head wound, but appeared otherwise uninjured.



Meanwhile, in the pilgrimage city of Santiago de Compostela, a shrine to the victims of the rail disaster was forming spontaneously at the entrance to the great cathedral of St James on Friday evening.



Friday was the feast of St James and the day many of the pilgrims to the traditional site of his tomb in the cathedral aim to complete their journeys. Some tied little bunches of flowers to the railings at the entrance. Others placed candles and notes on the ledges below. Nearby, a stack of pilgrims' staffs leant against the wall.



A day for the ending of journeys was appropriate for remembering those who on Wednesday failed to complete theirs. In many cases it was sheer chance that some of the passengers aboard the Alvia 151 lived and others died.



Carmen Quiroga from A Coru a had switched to a later train because she stood a better chance of dining aboard in peace. As soon as her son heard of the accident, he rang her mobile, but it was out of range. "When I eventually spoke to him, he began to weep: he thought I was there," she told La Voz de Galicia.



Benito Est vez changed his plans after learning from his parents that a relative had been taken to hospital, seriously ill. "I feared that I'd never see him again," he said.



Others were as unlucky as Quiroga and Estevez were fortunate. A young man at the scene of the accident who declined to be named said he had swapped seats on the way up from Madrid with a woman who was killed when the train derailed.



Father Ricardo V zquez, the spiritual director of the seminary in Santiago, was among those on hand to provide comfort at the centre where relatives of the victims learned of their loved ones' fate. Among the "devastated human beings" he attended was a man who "was crying out that he wanted to die because he felt responsible for the death of his daughter whom he had persuaded to come and visit him".



Manuel Su rez, a sales representative from near Santiago, often travelled to Madrid for his work, but never by rail. "He always went by car or plane," said a cousin. "But on this occasion, he said: 'This time, I'll go by train.'"


Monday, December 23, 2013

Bradley Manning's 'sole purpose was to make a difference', lawyer insists



In closing arguments, defence lawyer paints portrait of Wikileaks source as someone without 'evil intent'



The lawyer representing the WikiLeaks source Bradley Manning has asked the judge presiding over the soldier's court martial to decide between two stark portrayals of the accused - the prosecution's depiction of him as a traitor and seeker of notoriety, and the defence's account that he was motivated by a desire to make a difference in the world and save lives.



Over four hours of intense closing arguments at Fort Meade in Maryland, David Coombs set up a moral and legal clash of characterisations, between the Manning that he laid out for the court, and the callous and fame-obsessed Manning sketched on Thursday by the US government. "What is the truth?" the lawyer asked Colonel Denise Lind, the presiding judge who must now decide between the two accounts to reach her verdict.



"Is Manning somebody who is a traitor with no loyalty to this country or the flag, who wanted to download as much information as possible for his employer WikiLeaks? Or is he a young, naive, well-intentioned soldier who has his humanist belief central to his decisions and whose sole purpose was to make a difference."



Coombs answered his own rhetorical question by arguing that all the evidence presented to the trial over the past seven weeks pointed in one direction. "All the forensics prove that he had a good motive: to spark reforms, to spark change, to make a difference. He did not have a general evil intent."



Coombs ridiculed the prosecution case as a "diatribe" and said that its account of his client as someone who only cared about himself as the opposite of the truth. "He is concerned about everybody, he is concerned to save lives."



The lawyer continued: "He felt were were all connected to everybody, we had a duty to our fellow human beings. It may have been a little naive, but that is not anti-American, it is really what America is about."



The closing arguments presented over two days in the courtroom at Fort Meade have emerged into a clash of visions about the nature of leaking of official secrets in the digital age. At the centre of the battle is Manning himself, a diminutive figure in military fatigues, who has sat silently throughout.



With the end of the evidential stage of the trial, it now falls to the Lind to make sense of these two starkly conflicting pictures and reach a verdict that could come within days. Sitting without a jury at Manning's own request she must now decide whether the soldier is guilty of 21 counts that could see him detained in military custody for life without any chance of parole, plus a total of 154 years for itemised offences.



The soldier has already admitted to transmitting hundreds of thousands of documents to WikiLeaks, and to a lesser version of the charges that carry a maximum sentence of 20 years in jail.



The most serious charge against Manning, carrying a possible life sentence, is that he "aided the enemy", specifically al-Qaida, by passing intelligence to WikiLeaks which then made it accessible on the internet. In prosecution closing arguments, the government alleged that because of Manning sensitive US state secrets had been found in the possession of Osama bin Laden the day the al-Qaida leader was killed.



Countering that view, Coombs argued that WikiLeaks was a legitimate news organisation on a par with the international alliance of news outlets that had worked with the anti-secrecy websites to release edited versions of Manning's disclosures. "WikiLeaks is no different from the New York Times, no different from the Guardian, no different from Der Spiegel."



He cited the US government's own counter-intelligence report on WikiLeaks that described the organisation as being motivated by a desire to hold governments accountable to their people. "That is the watchdog function of the press - that is what the press is designed to do," Coombs said.



The "aiding the enemy" charge is the most contentious aspect of the Manning trial. It has provoked a wide debate about its possible impact on press freedom in the US, with first amendment advocates warning it could spread a chill across investigative reporting.



Coombs made his comments within that context, implying that to hold Manning guilty of helping al-Qaida by dint of having leaked to a news organisation would set a dangerous precedent. "Giving something to a legitimate news organisation is the way we hold our government accountable. Giving information to the world, to inform the public does not give intelligence to the enemy," he said.



Contrary to the prosecution's claim that he was indiscriminate in his leaking, Coombs said that Manning was careful to be selective in his choice of documents, weeding out "humint" reports that gave specific details on human sources on the ground and focusing instead on civilian loss of life such as the Apache video. "If he was a traitor who wanted to hurt the US, you would have seen a lot more indiscreet disclosures," he said.



The defence attorney also tried to undercut prosecution allegations that the more than 700,000 documents Manning leaked were damaging to the US. The soldier faces several counts under the 1917 Espionage Act accusing him of leaking intelligence "with reason to believe such information could be used to the injury of the United States or the advantage of any foreign nation".



Coombs attempted to counter those charges by arguing that in fact the WikiLeaks disclosures had very limited impact on US interests. The more than 750 files on Guantanamo detainees were "not worth the paper they were written on", the lawyer said, adding they were intended for background information and were riddled with inaccuracies.



The war logs from Afghanistan and Iraq were historical documents that recorded past battlefield events that could not provide useful intelligence to the enemy given how rapidly tactics on both sides changed in a military conflict. "The harm that could have been done is like Chicken Little yelling the sky is falling down," Coombs said.



In the most emotive scenes of his closing arguments, Coombs played to the court three clips from the video Manning uploaded to WikiLeaks of a 2007 Apache helicopter attack in Baghdad. The clips showed a group of civilians, that included two Reuters correspondents, being mowed down from aerial bullet fire.



Coombs asked the judge to watch the video "from the standpoint of a young man looking at eight people and what we know now to be the truth - there are two reporters there - standing on a street corner and being shot like fish in a barrel ... You have to view that through the eyes of a young man who cared about human life."


Reuters' climate-change coverage 'fell by nearly 50% with sceptic as editor'



Media Matters for America study follows blog by former agency reporter about appointment of Paul Ingrassia



Reuters' climate-change coverage fell by nearly 50% after a climate sceptic joined the news agency as a senior editor, a study has found.



The sharp decline in coverage since 2011, recorded by the Media Matters for America advocacy group, reinforces charges from a former staffer that Reuters cut back on climate stories under the influence of Paul Ingrassia, who is now the agency's managing editor.



Media Matters found a 48% decline in climate-change coverage over a six-month period, after Ingrassia joined the agency in 2011.



The New York Times and other news organisations have cut back on climate coverage, closing down blogs and redeploying correspondents, at times citing financial constraints. However, Bloomberg, Reuters' main competitor, has deepened its investment in climate change and sustainability coverage. The agency's founder, New York mayor Michael Bloomberg, has been a strong advocate for action on climate change.



Charges of an ideological component to Reuters' declining coverage - related to Ingrassia's personal doubts about established climate science - have sharpened concern in media and environmental as well as business circles, because of the agency's focus on financial news.



"It is just not responsible in our opinion to be cutting back on an issue that is having such a profound impact on every sector of the economy," said Mindy Lubbers, who heads the Ceres sustainable business network, which represents companies and investors controlling some $11tn in assets. "This is a financial risk that needs to be looked at and addressed."



The Climate Progress blog has since criticised Reuters for injecting references in stories to fringe groups that reject established climate science, and represent barely 3% of scientists publishing on climate change.



The news agency did not respond specifically to the findings of a deep cut in climate-change coverage. But in an emailed statement, a spokesperson wrote:



"Reuters covers climate change closely both as a scientific and public-safety issue, as well as the impact of climate change on businesses, the economy and the markets. We have a dedicated staff, including a team of specialist reporters at Point Carbon and a columnist, who all generate significant coverage on the topic across our various platforms. We remain committed to providing fair and independent coverage of climate change that complies fully with our Trust Principles."



The scrutiny of Reuters' climate-change coverage began earlier this month when David Fogarty, the former Asia Climate Change Correspondent , wrote in a blog post that climate-change coverage had been dramatically cut back after Ingrassia's hire. Fogarty, a 20-year veteran at Reuters, covered climate change for four and a half years. But early last year it became increasingly difficult to get climate-change stories published. Editors suggested he pursue other stories. Then Fogarty described a conversation with Ingrassia, then deputy editor, at a social event.



"In April last year, Paul Ingrassia [then deputy editor-in-chief] and I met and had a chat at a company function. He told me he was a climate-change sceptic. Not a rabid sceptic, just someone who wanted to see more evidence mankind was changing the global climate.



"Progressively, getting any climate change-themed story published got harder. It was a lottery. Some desk editors happily subbed and pushed the button. Others agonised and asked a million questions. Debate on some story ideas generated endless bureaucracy by editors frightened to take a decision, reflecting a different type of climate within Reuters - the climate of fear.



"By mid-October, I was informed that climate change just wasn't a big story for the present, but that it would be if there was a significant shift in global policy, such as the US introducing an emissions cap-and-trade system. Very soon after that conversation I was told my climate change role was abolished."



Fogarty left the agency soon after.



Disclosure: the Guardian is a Reuters client.


Sunday, December 22, 2013

Morsi being investigated over claims of 'colluding with Hamas' in uprising



Deposed president alleged to have helped Palestinian Islamists murder Egyptian police during 2011 overthrow of Hosni Mubarak



The overthrown Egyptian president, Mohamed Morsi, is under investigation for conspiring with Hamas during Egypt's 2011 revolution, state media reported on Friday, in the first official update on his status since he was forced from office and detained by the Egyptian army on 3 July.



After the announcement, Morsi was moved from a secret military facility to Cairo's Tora prison, where his predecessor, Hosni Mubarak, is also being held.



The news heightened tensions on a day when supporters of Egypt's two main factions formed rival mass protests across the country in what was billed as a showdown between people backing the army and Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood. By the evening, nine people had been killed, most in Alexandria, and at least 200 injured in clashes in five cities, according to the MENA state news agency.



Morsi is under investigation for colluding with the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas, an offshoot of the Muslim Brotherhood, during the 2011 uprising that toppled Mubarak. The charges allege that Morsi and other senior Muslim Brothers were rescued from jail during the revolution with Hamas's assistance, and then helped Hamas to attack Egyptian police facilities and murder policemen during the ousting of Mubarak. The Muslim Brotherhood says the fugitives left with the help of locals and that Hamas had no role in the uprising.



"It's laughable," said Gehad al-Haddad, a spokesman for the Muslim Brotherhood. "It's every crime that you would think of if you were looking at the 25 January revolution [the 2011 uprising] through the eyes of Hosni Mubarak. It's retaliation from the Mubarak state."



Haddad's argument spoke to the belief that Morsi's overthrow has enabled the return to influence of Mubarak-era officials and institutions who were sidelined by the 2011 revolution.



The police - a target of the 2011 uprising - have seen their popularity rise again following the anti-Morsi protests on 30 June, and they have been quick to capitalise. On Friday, police gave Egyptian flags to pro-army protesters in a show of unity.



The decision by the new government to focus first on allegations relating to events before Morsi's presidency, rather than on human rights violations that occurred during the presidency itself, indicates that it may be wary of implicating state institutions such as the police - who were also complicit in the torture and killing of protesters under Morsi.



Resurgent support for the police, who publicly backed Morsi's removal, was apparent among pro-army protesters, even from the most unlikely sources.



"The interior ministry [who run the police] have been purified of the blood of the past," said 66-year-old Magdy Iskandar Assad, whose son was killed by police officers during protests following Mubarak's fall. "There's a reconciliation now between the people and institutions like state security."



Assad was one of hundreds of thousands demonstrating in support of the army chief, General Abdel Fatah al-Sisi, who asked on Wednesday for Egyptians to give him a mandate to deal with what he termed terrorism. His speech was seen by sceptics as a thinly veiled attempt to win popular support for a violent crackdown on Morsi supporters. Much of the Egyptian media has spent the past month depicting the Muslim Brotherhood and its allies as terrorists. At least seven channels suspended normal programming to encourage their audience to go out to support Sisi, and thousands heeded the call - in particular in Cairo's Tahrir Square, where the atmosphere was of a military pageant.



Many wore photographs of Sisi around their neck. Military helicopters flew overhead to loud cheers from the crowd. Smiling protesters had their pictures taken with the soldiers who were securing the entrances to the square, some of them sitting on large armoured personnel carriers.



"My message to General Sisi is: what you did on 30 June was greater than what Egypt did in the 1973 war [against Israel]," said Walid Hedra, 38, a one-time Islamist who grew disillusioned with Morsi after he used dictatorial powers to force through a controversial new constitution last November.



"The armed forces are reborn again thanks to Sisi, the successor to Gamal Abdel Nasser," said Assad, referring to Egypt's much-loved dictator during the 50s and 60s. "Sisi is a courageous man who is working for the good of the country."



Egypt's pro-Sisi demonstrations also coincided with counter-demonstrations by Morsi's supporters. The Muslim Brotherhood organised 35 marches across the capital, raising fears of serious factional fighting after nightfall. By the evening, 37 had already been injured in clashes in northern Cairo - but clashes were fiercest in Alexandria, where the health ministry reported at least 100 injured.



The Muslim Brotherhood's leader, Mohamed Badie, had earlier stoked tensions by calling Sisi's overthrow of Morsi a more heinous crime than the destruction of Islam's most sacred shrine.



Many marching in Morsi's name were afraid of what Sisi's campaign against terrorism might entail. "It doesn't make sense for a defence minister to ask people to give him authority to fight terrorism," said Abdallah Hatem, a 19-year-old student from Cairo. "So his speech was a pretext for something else - a pretext to fight peaceful protesters who want Morsi to come back."



"None of us here are terrorists," added Mohamed Mostafa, a street vendor from southern Egypt, struggling nearby under the weight of a Morsi banner. "You can see that for yourself."



But not everyone on the streets accepted the binary choice of the army or the Brotherhood. A small group of Egyptians, calling themselves the Third Square, gathered in a square in west Cairo to object to the authoritarianism of both groups.



Since Morsi's overthrow, parts of Egypt have been hit regularly by violent protests and counter-protests by those supportive and opposed to his tenure. More than 200 Egyptians have already died in clashes between Morsi's supporters, opponents and security forces since protests against the ex-president began in late June.



Contrary to local media reports, which blame the Brotherhood almost entirely for the unrest, all sides have been party to violence - not least the state. On 8 July, police and soldiers massacred 51 pro-Morsi supporters at a protest outside a military compound in east Cairo. In turn, Morsi's opponents claim his armed supporters have started other fatal fights - in particular while marching provocatively through neighbourhoods south of Tahrir Square, the cradle of anti-Morsi dissent.



The fighting accompanies a surge in militancy in Sinai - long considered a hotbed of extremism - and a rise in sectarian attacks on Christians in southern Egypt.



Sisi's callout this week is considered an attempt to get the Brotherhood to leave the streets. But the movement's leaders are frightened of doing so because they fear an escalation in the current crackdown against senior figures within their group, as exemplified by Friday's charges against Morsi. Leaving the streets without securing Morsi's return to presidency - the Brotherhood's core and delusional demand - would also see them lose significant credibility among their supporters.



"It means doing the thing that the Brotherhood can't and won't do right now - giving up their claims to legitimacy," said Shadi Hamid, director of research at the Brookings Doha centre, and an expert on political Islam. "They've been telling their supporters that legitimacy is something worth dying for. They can't just change their minds overnight."



Asked whether he would accept anything less that Morsi's reinstatement, 19-year-old Morsi-backer Abdallah Hatem said: "It's impossible."



Additional reporting by Marwa Awad


More than 100 Morsi supporters killed in Egypt clashes



Death toll above three figures in Cairo as Muslim Brotherhood accuses security forces of shooting to kill



Egyptian security forces shot dead at least 100 supporters of ousted President Mohammed Morsi early on Saturday, the Muslim Brotherhood said, deepening the turmoil which has convulsed Egypt for weeks.

Brotherhood spokesman Gehad El-Haddad said the shooting started shortly before pre-dawn morning prayers on the fringes of a round-the-clock vigil being staged by backers of Morsi, who was toppled by the army more than three weeks ago.



"They are not shooting to wound, they are shooting to kill," Haddad said, adding that the death toll might be much higher.



Al Jazeera's Egypt television station reported that 120 had been killed and some 4,500 injured in the early morning violence near Cairo's Rabaa al-Adawia mosque.



Reporters at the scene said firing could still be heard hours after the troubles started.



"I have been trying to make the youth withdraw for five hours. I can't. They are saying they have paid with their blood and they do not want to retreat," said Saad el-Hosseini, a senior Brotherhood politician.



"It is a first attempt to clear Rabaa al-Adawia," he said.



There was no immediate comment from state authorities on what had happened.



The clashes started after police fired tear gas to disperse hundreds of Morsi supporters who tried to extend the sit-in in eastern Cairo.



Al Jazeera showed medics desperately trying to revive casualties arriving at a field hospital set up near the mosque.



El-Haddad said police started firing repeated rounds of tear-gas at protesters on a road close to the mosque sometime after 3am local time (2am BST). Shortly afterwards, live rounds started flying, hitting people at close range.



The bloodshed came the day after supporters and opponents of Morsi staged mass rival rallies across the country, bringing hundreds of thousands into the streets and laying bare deep divisions within the Arab world's most populous country.



Well over 200 people have died in violence since the overthrow of Morsi, most of them Brotherhood supporters.


Saturday, December 21, 2013

ICS (Android 4.0) Launched For Galaxy S2


Samsung Galaxy ICS




Finally a good news for Samsung Galaxy SII owners, Samsung has recently released official Android 4.0 (Ice-cream Sandwich) update for SGS2. The ICS firmware is dated 9th March 2012. Although Samsung has taken a little bit of time for releasing the ICS update still this firmware has no bluish ICS interface and is very much similar to Android 2.3.6. Galaxy SII owners must be expected something better, I, myself being a Samsung Galaxy S2 user, wanted a little more from them. Right now we can only wait for another update with few new features.



Galaxy S2 Android 4




The firmware is based on I9100XXLPQ (4.0.3) with modem XXLPQ and CSC OXALPQ, while the kernel build is 3.0.15. Although the update has not taken place worldwide and is limited to certain countries, but still if you want to try this ICS final build from Samsung, then you can have a look at XDA Forum or SAM Mobile, from where you can download this firmware along with the instructions for flashing/updating your Samsung Galaxy S2.



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Gmail Sign Up – Gmail.com Login


Gmail Login




www.Gmail.com Sign Up, Gmail Login or Gmail Sign In is a very easy process. Now Gmail.com users can also login multiple Gmail Accounts via Mobile (check the update at the end of this post). As everyone knows that Gmail.com is one of the best and most popular free email service provider. Gmail.com is owned by Google and has come up with one of the best services offered by Google. If you want to know how to login to gmail, then you can head over to this post.



Gmail is getting more and more popular as one of the best email service provider and it uses the Google accounts as a Gmail Login. To sign in into www.Gmail.com, you can visit, http://mail.google.com, but if you own multiple Google Accounts (Gmail.com Accounts), then, when you need to switch between Google Services, you need to login and log out. But now with a simple Greasemonkey script, you can easily switch between Google accounts, without login and logout each time. Once you have installed the Greasemonkey add-on for Firefox, install the user script.



Gmail Login



CLICK HERE FOR WWW.GMAIL.COM SIGN UP OR GMAIL.COM LOGIN




Next time when you login to Gmail.com or any Google account, you can see a drop down on the extreme right where you can add new accounts. When you want to switch account, select the account from the drop down list and this script will automatically switch accounts without having to login and log out.


Install User Script For Multiple www.gmail.com Login


Update 1: Now you can login to multiple Gmail accounts simultaneously in Gmail Mobile too. For Multiple Gmail Sign In, click on the account switcher at the bottom of the thread list and then click on "Sign into an another account." Now you can quickly switch between two Gmail accounts by selecting the desired account from the Accounts menu.



Update 2: Sign up for a google account or gmail.com account means that you are signing up for Google plus account too. It means that if you sign up for a www.gmail.com Gmail account or Google account, it will automatically create a Google Plus account for you and your all the Google services will have same logins and will be integrated with each other. Means when you login your Gmail account (www.gmail.com), it will automatically login your Google and Google plus account too.



Update 3: Google has recently changed their privacy policy and have merged all their policies to a single privacy policy. It means that the privacy policy of Gmail (www.gmail.com) has also been changed. You can have a look in their new privacy policy, if you are very much conscious about your privacy.





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