Saturday, December 31, 2011

Rome's Sears, Kmart safe ? for now

by AP, staff reports Associated Press

A Sears store in Longmont, Colo., displays sale signs on Thursday, Dec. 29, 2011. The Hoffman Estates-based retailer Sears announced specific stores it would close on Thursday, Dec. 29. Sears announced this week that it would close as many as 120 stores nationally after poor holiday sales. The Longmont, Colo., store (above) is one of the stores that will close, but for now the Rome Sears and Kmart stores have been spared. (Joshua Buck, Associated Press)

A Sears store in Longmont, Colo., displays sale signs on Thursday, Dec. 29, 2011. The Hoffman Estates-based retailer Sears announced specific stores it would close on Thursday, Dec. 29. Sears announced this week that it would close as many as 120 stores nationally after poor holiday sales. The Longmont, Colo., store (above) is one of the stores that will close, but for now the Rome Sears and Kmart stores have been spared. (Joshua Buck, Associated Press)

slideshow A preliminary closing list issued Thursday does not call for the shuttering of either of Rome?s Sears or Kmart stores.

Sears Holding Corp. announced earlier this week it would close as many as 120 stores to raise cash.

A preliminary closing list of 79 stores does not include the Sears at Mount Berry Square or the Kmart on Hicks Drive, which also sells Sears appliances and a few other Sears items. It was not known Thursday when more closures will be announced.

In Georgia, Sears Holdings Corp. says it will close its store at the Macon mall, along with several Kmarts in Buford, Columbus, Douglasville, Jonesboro and Southwest Atlanta.

Florida will be hit the hardest by the closing of Sears and Kmart stores, losing 11.

Ohio, Michigan and Georgia are not far behind with six store closures planned in their states. Tennessee, North Carolina and Minnesota are set to lose four stores each.

A spokeswoman for Sears Holding Corp. said each store employs between 40 and 80 people.

None of the closures announced so far are in Sears? home state of Illinois.

The projected closings represent only about 3 percent of Sears Holdings? U.S. stores. Sears and Kmart merged in 2005. The company now has about 3,560 stores in the U.S. That?s up from 3,500 immediately after the merger, because of the addition of more small stores.

Source: http://rn-t.com/bookmark/16938719

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Friday, December 30, 2011

After Kim Jong-il funeral: collapse or continuity for North Korea? (The Christian Science Monitor)

Seoul, South Korea ? About 200,000 North Koreans bade a tearful farewell today to ?Dear Leader? Kim Jong-il in a three-hour funeral procession in Pyongyang that made one point clear: North Korean strategists want the world to know that third son Kim Jong-un is their new leader.

While crowds wept and wailed to the stentorian sounds of funeral music, Kim Jong-un, wearing a long black coat, trudged in snow under gray skies on the right side of the hearse bearing the flag-draped coffin of his father on the roof.

That image provides compelling visual evidence of the rapid ascent of Kim Jong-un, still in his late 20s, to the top of the North Korean hierarchy. Regardless of how much power he really wields among the other top leaders ? also walking beside the hearse ? he will hold the country?s highest military and party titles.

Just how isolated is North Korea? 6 facts to consider

Now the question is whether he can endure the advice of his uncle Jang Song-thaek, right behind him in the funeral cortege. The corollary question is whether North Korea will collapse under the weight of the hunger, poverty, and disease afflicting the vast majority of citizens outside the ruling elite and military establishment of some 1.1 million troops, believed to be the world?s fourth or fifth largest.

As far as people here are concerned, stability would be the best outcome for North Korea ? though few might be able to predict the long-range future of a country that?s increasingly dependent on China, its Korean War ally, for fuel, food, military support and much else needed to survive.

?Most people support the theory that Kim Jong-un will settle down successfully,? says Kim Tae-woo, president of the Korea Institute of National Unification. ?He is of royal pedigree? ? an allusion to his inheritance of the dynasty founded by his long-ruling grandfather, Kim Il-sung  ?  ?and therefore he has a kind of legitimacy.?

RELATED: 4 questions about 'dear successor' Kim Jong-un

That view of continuity and stability in North Korea is common among analysts even as Kim Jong-un has to learn to lead North Korea?s 24 million people.

That task assumes urgency while North Korean planners try to realize Kim Jong-il?s dream of ?a strong and prosperous country? by next year.

Worst case scenario?Most ordinary South Koreans express the idea that it's in their country's interest to keep North Korea stable. Only as a worst-case scenario does the prospect of a ?collapse? of a system that?s endured countless forecasts of failure come up in serious discussion.

?Collapse can be a disaster,? says Kim Tae-woo, who?s followed North Korea closely as a military analyst, but he believes ?China?s unconditional support? is ?one reason why North Korea in its present form will prevail.?

That?s the conventional view among analysts as China steadily increases its influence over the North. Reports here are that China is assiduously spreading propaganda, claiming among other things, that the Korean national dish, kimchi, a spicy confection of pickled cabbage and other vegetables, actually came from China.

?The Chinese strategy, no matter what, is to occupy North Korea,? says Chang Han-jin, a salesman. ?China will send troops or aid to North Korea if necessary to make sure of their power there.?

Shim Jae-hoon, a long-time political consultant here, agrees. ?China is interested in propping up the regime whatever comes,? he says. ?I don?t see any sign of North Korea cracking up. The more North Korea is dependent on China, the better it is for them.?

Strongman or friend? Still, speculation here tends to focus on a question other than collapse ? whether Kim Jong-un will assert himself as a strongman or adopt a conciliatory policy toward his people as well as South Korea and the US.

?There?s no other option for him but to be more cooperative with the outside world,? says Paik Hak-soon, senior fellow at the Sejong Institute, a think tank here. In the quest for food aid from South Korea and the US, both of which stopped shipments of food in 2008, Mr. Paik predicts that Kim will be open to negotiations on suspending the nuclear weapons program that was probably his father?s most obvious legacy.

Paik acknowledges, though, North Korea does not want to ?to appear weak and bow to pressure,? particularly in view of the power of the generals with whom Kim Jong-un might eventually come into conflict.

Kim Jong-un, like his father before him, is now ?supreme commander? of the armed forces, but some observers believe he may find the military holds the final power.

?If he goes the wrong way, they?ll push him back,? says Tim Peters, a missionary with long experience here dealing with refugees from the North. ?Word is he was more harsh than his father when he was taking over security services? ? and ordered the executions of defectors who had fled to China and then sent back by Chinese authorities, says Mr. Peters.

People here are aware of the existence of vast prison camps in North Korea and the depths to which North Korea has fallen economically, but hardly want to consider the implications of the downfall of the regime.

?I don?t want to think about it,? says Moon Su-jin, working in a travel agency here. ?It?s too scary.?

Just how isolated is North Korea? 6 facts to consider

RELATED: 4 questions about 'dear successor' Kim Jong-un

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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/nkorea/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/csm/20111228/wl_csm/442348

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

'Shameless' Moment: Frank Gallagher's Inappropriate Confession (VIDEO)

The first season of Showtime's "Shameless" was full of memorable Frank Gallagher moments, despite (or because of) the fact that few of them showed the inebriated father of six in an especially good light.

Still, no matter how selfish, drunk or scheming Frank was at any moment,William H. Macy's performance always made the sozzled Chicagoan worth watching.

In this exclusive clip from the Season 1 DVD set of "Shameless," which goes on sale Dec. 27, we get yet another example of Frank's boundary issues. Most of us wouldn't go into graphic detail about our sins and faults while sitting in a church pew, but Frank doesn't have a problem with that.

"Shameless," which also stars Emmy Rossum and Joan Cusack, returns to Showtime Jan. 8. Keep up with Huffington Post TV for news and interviews about the comedically-inflected drama, and for an assessment of how the American adaptation of the British show of the same name has progressed in its second season.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/12/26/shameless-showtime_n_1161033.html

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

HTC unlocks all Android bootloaders from smartphones launched after September 20...

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Source: http://www.facebook.com/tmonews/posts/202314766525686

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Social Media in the Legal Sector | The Big Picture

Macro Notes

The 5th short term tax rebate since ?01 agreed to
Peter Boockvar

I'm not sure if an agreement in Washington over the payroll tax cut is the reason why the market is looking higher again but to put it in perspective, it's the 5th short term tax cut/rebate check agreement since 2001. Bush had his in '01 and '08 followed by Obama in '09 and this year and next. As with any short term policy, whether fiscal or monetary, the economy is left back at square 1 when it wears off. Show me one employer that has or will hire someone new because of these 5 rebates. I'm all for getting our...

read more ?

Source: http://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2011/12/social-media-in-the-legal-sector/

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

At least 25 dead in Nigeria church blast: officials (Reuters)

ABUJA (Reuters) ? At least 25 people were killed in a bomb attack on a church in a satellite town on the outskirts of the Nigerian capital Abuja on Sunday, emergency services said.

"I cannot give an exact figure of casualties now. But we (National Emergency Management Agency, NEMA) came with 25 body bags and we have exhausted them all. So at this point we are talking of 25 bodies in those bags," said Slaku Lugard, a NEMA official.

(Reporting by Tim Cocks Writing by Maria Golovnina)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/space/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111225/wl_nm/us_nigeria_blast

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NFL Playoff Scenarios: Tim Tebow Will Lead Broncos to Postseason with Win

Tim Tebow knows that his Denver Broncos?need just one win to get into the NFL postseason with a No. 4 seed for winning the AFC West.

Expect for the young quarterback to rally his team and inspire a performance that blows the Kansas City Chiefs out of the water on New Years Day, getting the Broncos into the playoffs for the first time since 2005 in the process.

The Oakland Raiders are the biggest threat to derail Denver?s dreams and win the AFC West, but they have a much harder road to travel.

Will Broncos Win the AFC West?

    Will Broncos Win the AFC West?

  • Yes

  • No

In order for them to surpass the Broncos in the AFC West, the Raiders will need to beat the San Diego Chargers and Denver must lose. If both teams fall, the Broncos will narrowly edge the Raiders because of the tiebreaker.

Don?t think for a minute that Denver will be content with letting the Raiders decide their fate.

After Tebow played arguably the worst game of his career against Buffalo this week, you can safely assume that he is due for a huge rebound.

Remember what happened after the Detroit game?

The former Florida Gator was unable to get anything going on offense and lost 45-10 that week, but ripped off six straight wins after.

They ran into a red-hot?Patriots team in Week 15 and then carried that losing stench into the Bills game on Saturday.

You can believe that they will ditch those losing ways in their most important game of the season in Week 17 and really take it to Kansas City.

Tebow is just one win away from leading a historic turnaround after replacing Kyle Orton as the starter, and will get it done on Sunday. The city needs it, and he will not let them down.

Source: http://bleacherreport.com/articles/997398-nfl-playoff-scenarios-tim-tebow-will-lead-broncos-to-postseason-with-win

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Monday, December 26, 2011

TURKEY ? EUROPEAN UNION Tensions between Ankara and Paris over the Armenian question

Istanbul ? Franco-Turkish relations have never been easy under President Nicolas Sarkozy. This time, the issue is not the legitimacy of Turkey?s place in Europe, but rather the genocide perpetrated by the Ottoman Empire in 1915 against the Armenians, an action never acknowledged by the secularist state founded by Kemal Ataturk or by today?s neo-Ottomanist government under Erdogan.

The spark that set off the controversy is a bill before the French National Assembly that would criminalise denying the Armenian holocaust with up to a year in prison and a fine of 45,000 Euros. France had already recognised the Armenian genocide in 2001.

In his statements, Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan was dour and bombastic, accusing France of being discriminatory, racist and xenophobic. Angry, the prime minister said that France?s ?step will open heavy wounds that will be difficult to heal?. Instead, the French should look at their own genocides in Algeria and Rwanda.

Before the bill was adopted, thousands of Turks gathered in front of the French parliament to protest. As a first response, Erdogan recalled the Turkish ambassador in Paris for consultations. He also suspended military cooperation with France, cancelled military agreements with Paris, froze bilateral deals and suspended political and economic contacts between the two countries.

Measured and conventional, French Foreign Minister Alain Jupp? urged Ankara to remain calm and not overreact. ?We have lots of things to work on together,? he said. The draft bill is expected to be go before the French Senate in February 2012 ahead of France?s presidential elections. Back in May of this year, the Senate had refused to criminalise genocide denial.

In Turkey, reactions reflect the clich?s usually associated with Erdogan and his ruling party, the AKP, closely following the official version of events, which backs Ottoman wartime policies and claims, whereby what happened in 1915 was sad but inevitable.

Various meetings and protests have also been organised by academic and commercial groups in Paris. In Turkey, the bill has allowed Erdogan to rally opposition parties, CHP and MJP, against France.

In Istanbul, the local Armenian community, especially people close to the newspaper Agos, which was edited by Hrant Dink until 2007 when he was murdered by Turkish ultra-nationalists, think that the French bill is a disaster for freedom of thought. For them, what counts is the ?human aspect of the genocide?.

The Armenian Patriarchate in Istanbul issued a press release, seen by many as deceitful and full of religious sentiments. Armenian journalist, Mark Yesayan thinks that it might have been made on the request of people in high places.

Turkey?s liberal and leftwing circles view the French law as a foolish move by Sarkozy to win the Armenian vote in the upcoming presidential elections.

They note that the attempt by the Turkish government to criticise France in the name of freedom of thought is inappropriate given Turkey?s own shortcomings in the matter. For them, Erdogan?s reference to Algerian and Rwanda cannot legitimise Turkey?s official position. Sadly, they believe the country lacks the maturity and courage, at an individual and collective level, to face its own history.

Turkish analysts believe the French Senate will approve the bill and that the European Court of Human Rights will uphold it because it does not violate European law.

Significantly, diplomatic circles in Brussels see a connection between statements by Turkey?s Minister for EU Affairs Egemen Ba???, a possible boycott of French products, and the recent crisis between the European Union and Great Britain.

Great Britain?s isolation in the European Union will hinder, not help Turkey?s EU membership bid. London has always been a keen supporter of Ankara.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/speroforum/nroq/~3/qa2Rl9oCsYM/65874-TURKEY--EUROPEAN-UNION---Tensions-between-Ankara-and-Paris-over-the-Armenian-question

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workouts not being shared on facebook and twitter

When I upload my workouts to ST, they are nolonger being shared with facebook or twitter.

I still have both options selected, and as far as I know I am running the latest version on my Nokia N8.

This was working two days ago, but suddenly stopped.

I disabled from facebook and twitter and then re-enabled but this has not helped.

Can someone please supply me with some help or an answer

Source: http://support.sports-tracker.com/sportstracking/topics/workouts_not_being_shared_on_facebook_and_twitter

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

MVALLE888: Watch: Prince Albert and Charlene Wittstock Royal Wedding Pictures, Video http://t.co/cDDpL5tT #Royalty

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Source: http://twitter.com/MVALLE888/statuses/150867305918767104

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Chinese villagers demand release of detainees (AP)

BEIJING ? Protesters gathered Saturday outside a town hall in southern China to appeal for the release of people detained during demonstrations over a planned power plant expansion, a witness said.

About 1,000 people took part in the appeal in Haimen, on China's southeastern coast, said the witness, who was contacted by phone and refused to give his name. He said they talked with local officials, who promised to convey the appeal to their superiors. He said the crowd started to disperse after about two hours.

"There was no violence," the man said.

The government's Xinhua News Agency says five people were detained during protests this week against plans to expand the power plant. Residents complain that the plant has contributed to a rise in the number of local cancer cases and polluted seas, threatening local fishing.

On Friday, police fired tear gas at protesters, who included elderly men and women.

China has seen an upsurge in such protests over pollution following three decades of explosive growth and lax environmental enforcement.

Protests in Haimen started Tuesday when thousands of people besieged a government office and blocked a highway. Police used tear gas in an attempt to disperse them, and demonstrators hurled rocks, water bottles and bricks in return. Clashes broke out, injuring an unknown number of protesters and police, residents say.

The government said Tuesday that the power plant project would be temporarily suspended, according to Xinhua. But protesters said they have not heard directly from authorities and want the release of several protesters in their teens or early 20s.

Local access to the highway reopened Saturday after protesters who blocked the road dispersed Friday evening, said an employee who answered the phone at an adjacent filling station.

"I saw no protests today. Traffic is normal," said the man, who refused to give his name.

In September, hundreds of villagers in an eastern Chinese city near Shanghai demonstrated against pollution they blamed on a solar panel factory.

In August, 12,000 residents in the northeastern port city of Dalian protested against a chemical plant after waves from a tropical storm broke a dike guarding the plant and raised fears that floodwaters could release toxic chemicals.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111224/ap_on_re_as/as_china_unrest

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

Video: An ecosystem being transformed - Yellowstone 15 years after the return of wolves

Video: An ecosystem being transformed - Yellowstone 15 years after the return of wolves

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

On the 15th anniversary of the return of wolves to Yellowstone National Park, a quiet but profound rebirth of life and ecosystem health is emerging, scientists conclude in a new report.

For the first time in 70 years, the over-browsing of young aspen and willow trees has diminished as elk populations in northern Yellowstone declined and their fear of wolf predation increased. Trees and shrubs have begun recovering along some streams, providing improved habitat for beaver and fish. Birds and bears also have more food.

"Yellowstone increasingly looks like a different place," said William Ripple, a professor in the Department of Forest Ecosystems and Society at Oregon State University, and lead author of the study.

"These are still the early stages of recovery, and some of this may still take decades," Ripple said. "But trees and shrubs are starting to come back and beaver numbers are increasing. The signs are very encouraging."

The findings of this report, based on a recent analysis done by OSU researchers and a review of many other studies as well, were just published in Biological Conservation, a professional journal. They outline an ecosystem renaissance that has taken place since wolves were restored to Yellowstone after being extirpated in the 1920s.

Along four streams studied in the Lamar River basin, 100 percent of the tallest young aspen sprouts were being browsed in 1998, compared to less than 20 percent last year. Heavy browsing by elk on this favorite food had caused new aspen tree recruitment to essentially grind to a halt in the mid-to-late 1900s, when wolves were absent, but new trees are now growing again in places.

Among the observations in this report:

  • Since their reintroduction in 1995-96, the wolf population generally increased until 2003, forcing changes in both elk numbers and behavior due to what researchers call the "ecology of fear."
  • The northern range elk populations decreased from more than 15,000 individuals in the early 1990s to about 6,000 last year, and remaining elk now have different patterns of movement, vigilance, and other traits.
  • By 2006, some aspen trees had grown tall enough they were no longer susceptible to browsing by elk, and cottonwood and willow were also beginning to return in places.
  • Improved willow growth is providing habitat that allows for a greater diversity and abundance of songbirds such as the common yellowthroat, warbling vireo and song sparrow.
  • The number of beaver colonies in the same area increased from one in 1996 to 12 in 2009, with positive impacts on fish habitat.
  • Increases in beaver populations have strong implications for riparian hydrology and biodiversity ? Wyoming streams with beaver ponds have been found to have 75 times more abundant waterfowl than those without.
  • The coyote population decreased with the increase in wolf numbers, potentially allowing more small mammals that provide food for other avian and mammalian predators, such as red foxes, ravens and bald eagles.

Evidence of improved ecosystem health following the return of wolves is "becoming increasingly persuasive," the scientists said in their report, though they also note that an increasing population of bison is continuing to impact young woody plants in the Lamar Valley.

"The wolves have made a major difference in Yellowstone," said Robert Beschta, a professor emeritus of forestry at OSU and co-author on the study.

"Whether similar recovery of plant communities can be expected in other areas, especially on public lands outside national parks, is less clear," Beschta said. "It may be necessary for wolves not only to be present but to have an ecologically effective density, and mechanisms to deal with human and wolf conflicts also need to be improved."

But at least in America's first national park, the return of this large predator is having an impact.

"Predation and predation risk associated with large predators appear to represent powerful ecological forces," the researchers concluded in their report, "capable of affecting the interactions of numerous animals and plants, as well as the structure and function of ecosystems."

###

Oregon State University: http://www.orst.edu

Thanks to Oregon State University for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/116235/Video__An_ecosystem_being_transformed___Yellowstone____years_after_the_return_of_wolves_

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Facebook Subscriber # > Twitter Follower # ?

Twitter Extinct doneWhere do you publish first if you have more Facebook subscribers than Twitter followers? ?That's a question more and more journalists are going to be asking themselves. Just 3.5 months after the launch of Facebook's late entry into?asymmetrical following, many individual content producers including?TechCrunch's MG Siegler, The New York Times'?Nick Bilton, and myself have have seen our subscriber counts surpass our follower tally. How? Because Facebook's larger user count makes it easier to amass subscribers.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/BoU5c2xfTYs/

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Friday, December 23, 2011

Japan Mobile Carriers to Expand Mobile Touch Payment Beyond Sony Standard

Japan's three biggest mobile phone companies said Wednesday they will adopt international standards for touch payment systems, expanding beyond the current implementation by Sony.

NTT DoCoMo, KDDI and Softbank said they will work together in the newly formed "Japan Mobile NFC Consortium" to bring the country in line with oversea trends. The companies currently use the NFC, or near field communication, standard called FeliCa, developed and owned by Sony, but said they will incorporate two other standards that are more common abroad, known as "Type A" and "Type B."

As in other countries, the technology allows users to pay for train tickets, food and other purchases by placing a card near special readers. In Japan many phones also come with the technology built in, but foreign-made phones must be modified to work in the existing ecosystem, which is run by DoCoMo and called "Osaifu Keita," or "wallet phone."

The companies, which collectively have about 124 million contracts in a country with a total population of under 130 million, are eager to squeeze more income out of mobile devices, as price wars cut revenue and massive investments in next-generation networks weigh on their balance sheets.

Encouraged by the government, they are also moving to adopt more international standards after long years of developing Japan-only implementations, a trend that led analysts to dub the country's mobile industry "Galapagos," because technologies evolved cut off from the rest of the world.

The move away from a Sony-dependent technology should also lower costs for the mobile trio. A joint press release announcing the founding of the consortium said the companies want to free users from having to worry about different NFC standards as well as "create an environment where service providers can offer efficient, low-cost NFC services."

Source: http://feeds.pcworld.com/click.phdo?i=8f1225e76b20b80f45ba12238adb3966

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95% Moneyball

What are you really worth? Excellent Film! It's been a long time since they have bring a very good baseball film and here it is. I love baseball and this was like watching myself in this movie because this was one of my dreams as a child and teenager to be either a pro baseball player or a scout. There was some great acting and the story is very real and classy. This movie goes on my list as one of the few best films this year. You gotta love baseball!Oakland Athletics general manager Billy Beane (Brad Pitt) is upset by his team's loss to the New York Yankees in the 2001 postseason. With the impending departure of star players Johnny Damon, Jason Giambi, and Jason Isringhausen to free agency, Beane attempts to devise a strategy for assembling a competitive team for 2002 but struggles to overcome Oakland's limited player payroll. During a visit to the Cleveland Indians, Beane meets Peter Brand (Jonah Hill), a young Yale economics graduate with radical ideas about how to assess players' value. Beane tests Brand's theory by asking whether he would have drafted him, Beane having been a Major League player before becoming general manager. Though scouts considered Beane a phenomenal player, his career in the Major Leagues was disappointing. After some prodding, Brand admits that he would not have drafted him until the ninth round and that Beane would probably have gone to college instead. Sensing opportunity, Beane hires Brand as the Athletics' assistant general manager.The team's scouts are first dismissive of and then hostile towards Brand's non-traditional sabermetric approach to scouting players. Rather than relying on the scouts' experience and intuition, Brand selects players based almost exclusively on their on base percentage (OBP). By finding players with a high OBP but characteristics that lead scouts to dismiss them, Brand assembles a team of undervalued players with far more potential than the A's hamstrung finances would otherwise allow. Despite vehement objections from the scouts, Beane supports Brand's theory and hires the players he selected, such as unorthodox submarine pitcher Chad Bradford (Casey Bond). Following the free agent signings, Beane finds that he also faces opposition from Art Howe (Philip Seymour Hoffman), the Athletics' manager. With tensions already high between them because of a contract dispute, Howe disregards Beane and Brand's strategy and plays the team in a traditional style despite their unsuitability. Beane is eventually forced to trade away the lone traditional star player (Carlos Pe?a) to force Howe to use the new recruits.Early in the season, the Athletics fare poorly, leading critics within and outside the team to dismiss the new method as a dismal failure. Beane convinces the owner to stay the course, and eventually the team's record begins to improve. Ultimately, the Athletics win an unprecedented 20 consecutive games, setting the American League record. Their streak is capped with a victory over the Kansas City Royals. Like many baseball players, Beane is superstitious and avoids attending or sometimes even following games as they are in progress. His family convinces him to go to the A's game against the Royals, as Oakland is already leading 110 after the third inning and appears set to continue their winning streak. Beane arrives, only to watch the team go to pieces and allow the Royals to even the score. Finally, the A's do clinch the victory with a walk-off home run by one of Brand's picks, Scott Hatteberg. Despite all their success, the A's lose in the first round of the postseason, this time to the Minnesota Twins. Beane is disappointed, but satisfied at having demonstrated the value of his and Brand's methods.In closing, the film notes that Beane passed up the opportunity to become the general manager of the Boston Red Sox, despite an offer of $12.5 million a year salary, which would have made him the highest paid GM in baseball history. Also noted is Boston's World Series victory soon after in 2004, based on the theories that Beane pioneered.

September 29, 2011

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/moneyball/

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Sunday, December 18, 2011

The individual mandate: Health-care's inherent controversy (The Week)

New York ? President Obama's health-care bill requires that every American have health insurance. Is that constitutional?

Who first proposed making health insurance compulsory?
The Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank. In the late 1980s, when Democrats were pushing to require employers to provide health insurance, the foundation started thinking about ways to achieve universal coverage without placing a heavy burden on business. Its experts soon encountered the "free rider" problem: In a system where insurers are barred from refusing applicants with pre-existing conditions, many people ? especially the young and healthy ? would only buy a policy when illness struck. But if only sick people bought coverage, insurers would pay out more in doctors' bills than they received in premiums, and quickly go bust. To overcome this death spiral, the Heritage Foundation suggested that every American be required to buy health insurance, a requirement known as the individual mandate.

Which politicians took up that idea?
Many Republicans did in the early 1990s, after President Clinton introduced a plan that would have forced companies to cover employees. "I am for people, individuals ? exactly like automobile insurance ? having health insurance and being required to have health insurance," said Newt Gingrich, then House minority whip, in 1993. When the Clinton plan collapsed in 1994, talk of the individual mandate died with it. But a decade later, Mitt Romney, then the governor of Massachusetts, resurrected the concept for his state health-care plan, which requires residents to buy health insurance or pay up to $1,212 in annual penalties. "It's a Republican way of reforming the market," Romney said when the law debuted, in 2006. "[To have] people show up [at a hospital] when they get sick, and expect someone else to pay, that's a Democratic approach."

SEE MORE: The 'ObamaCare' case: Should Elena Kagan and Clarence Thomas sit out?

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So why did Obama adopt a Republican proposal?
At first, he didn't want to. During his 2008 campaign for the Democratic nomination, Obama ran a TV ad criticizing rival candidate Hillary Clinton's support for a mandate, saying she would force everyone "to buy insurance, even if you can't afford it." But after President Obama and the Democratic Congress began to construct his health-care plan, advisers warned that free riders would undermine the objectives of extending insurance coverage to anyone who wanted it. For health reform to work, young, healthy people had to be pushed into the pool, to spread cost and risk. So the president allowed his 2010 Affordable Care Act to incorporate a provision that, by 2014, all Americans must have health coverage or face a tax penalty. Conservatives decried that directive as a gross infringement of individual liberty, and their anger helped fuel the rise of the Tea Party. Twenty-six states and the National Federation of Independent Business are now challenging the mandate's constitutionality at the Supreme Court, which will make a final judgment by June.

How has Obama responded?
His administration argues that the mandate is authorized by the Constitution's commerce clause, which allows the federal government to regulate interstate economic activity. Several conservative judges agree. In a November appeals court decision that upheld the mandate, Judge Laurence Silberman, a Reagan appointee, declared that Congress must "be free to forge national solutions to national problems." And this summer, Judge Jeffrey Sutton ? a George W. Bush appointee to the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals ? concluded that the individual mandate is a legally sound way to prevent taxpayers and hospitals from having to pick up the cost of treating the uninsured. "Not every intrusive law is an unconstitutionally intrusive law," he wrote.

SEE MORE: Should the Supreme Court's 'ObamaCare' arguments be televised?

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Haven't other judges disagreed?
Yes. In August, the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals declared that it could find no precedent for ordering Americans to buy health insurance. "Even in the face of a Great Depression, a World War, a Cold War, recessions, oil shocks, inflation, and unemployment," the majority wrote, "Congress never sought to require the purchase of wheat or war bonds, force a higher savings rate or greater consumption of American goods." Other federal judges and critics of "Obamacare" warn that the mandate sets a dangerous precedent that the government could use to make citizens purchase whatever it deems good for them ? or for the economy. "Congress could require every American to buy a new Chevy Impala every year," said a 2009 Heritage Foundation report.

What happens if the individual mandate is voided?
It depends. If the Supreme Court decides that the Affordable Care Act can't function without the individual mandate, it could strike down the entire law. But it might declare the mandate "severable," and remove that particular part of the law, while letting the rest of it limp along, with far fewer uninsured people covered and less ability to rein in costs. Some experts have proposed that instead of the uninsured being required to buy insurance, they could be "nudged" into the health-care system by giving them a window of time during which they could buy insurance relatively inexpensively; once that window closed, the cost would rise sharply. The problem with any alternative to the individual mandate, said Paul Ginsburg, president of the Center for Studying Health System Change, is that it would have to be approved by the bitterly divided Congress. "You can't expect that in these times," he said. "People don't work on these compromises too readily anymore."

SEE MORE: A conservative judge's 'compelling' defense of 'ObamaCare'

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How the Supreme Court could punt
Next year's Supreme Court hearing has been billed as judgment day for Obama's Affordable Care Act. But it might end with no judgment at all. Before the justices rule on the individual mandate's constitutionality, they will first have to decide whether the 1867 Anti-Injunction Act bars the claimants' challenge. That law prevents citizens from challenging the legality of a tax before it goes into effect. If the court finds that the penalty for defying the Affordable Care Act's mandate is a tax, they could push a legal challenge back to 2015, when the first fines will be levied. And that, said Simon Lazarus, an expert at the National Senior Citizens Law Center, might "be a good solution for a court that doesn't really care to be Public Issue No. 1 in an election year."

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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politicsopinion/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/theweek/20111216/cm_theweek/222477

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Global markets cautious amid euro crisis concerns (AP)

LONDON ? Global stocks were muted on Friday as concerns about Europe's debt crisis flared back up, with Fitch ratings agency warning it could downgrade six eurozone nations, including Italy and Spain, two of the shakiest economies in the region.

Although Fitch affirmed France's top AAA rating, it announced it was considering downgrading Italy, Spain, Ireland, Belgium, Slovenia and Cyprus.

It said that following last week's EU summit, it "has concluded that a 'comprehensive solution' to the eurozone crisis is technically and politically beyond reach."

The warnings came at the end of a day full of negative news for Europe. Ireland's economy contracted much more than expected in the third quarter, Spanish regional debt rose sharply over the past year, and EU officials admitted that talks to get Greece's private creditors to take losses on their bonds were not going as well as hoped.

The affirmation of France's rating and the Italian government's survival of a confidence vote were rare bright spots in a week of dire financial news for Europe.

After trading higher most of the day, European stocks closed lower. Britain's FTSE shed 0.3 percent to 5,387.34 and Germany's DAX lost 0.5 percent to 5,701.78.

France's CAC-40 closed 0.9 percent lower at 2,972.30 ? its losses were driven in part by a report from the national statistics agency predicting a recession in the country over this quarter and the next. Fitch's affirmation of the country's rating came only after markets closed.

Investor sentiment had been stronger earlier in the day, as traders focused on an improvement in U.S. economic indicators.

This week, U.S. government data showed the number of people applying for unemployment benefits last week was at its lowest since May 2008. That's a sign that layoffs are easing, a first step toward bringing down the unemployment rate, which currently stands at 8.6 percent.

Traders were also encouraged by a report from the Federal Reserve of New York that its index measuring regional manufacturing jumped to the highest level since May. That was far more than economists were expecting. A similar report from the Philadelphia branch of the Fed also increased more than analysts anticipated.

Early gains in Wall Street were trimmed by the concerns in Europe. The Dow Jones industrial average dipped 0.2 percent to 11,848.15, while the S&P 500 gained 0.1 percent to 1,217.24.

The euro was steady at $1.3013, as was the dollar against the Japanese yen, at 77.85 yen.

In Asia, Japan's Nikkei 225 index closed 0.3 percent higher at 8,401.72. South Korea's Kospi rose 1.2 percent to 1,839.96 and Hong Kong's Hang Seng added 1.4 percent to 18,285.39. Benchmarks in Singapore, Taiwan and Indonesia also rose.

Mainland China shares ended a six-session losing streak, with the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index gaining 2 percent to close at 2,224.84.

Analysts stopped short of calling the gains a recovery, as trading was light ahead of the holidays.

Signs emerged that the Chinese central bank may have intervened in the currency market by offering dollars to support the Chinese yuan, which has been weakening in recent sessions. That raised speculation that authorities may plan more market-boosting measures.

The yuan strengthened to a record 6.3294 against the U.S. dollar, but later eased to 6.3446. Weakness in the yuan could raise tensions with countries such as the U.S. that complain it is already undervalued.

Benchmark oil for January delivery was up 26 cents to $94.13 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract fell $1.08 to finish at $93.87 per barrel on Nymex on Thursday.

___

Pamela Sampson in Bangkok and Elaine Kurtenbach in Shanghai contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/stocks/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111216/ap_on_bi_ge/world_markets

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Saturday, December 17, 2011

First Take on the Last (pre-Iowa) Debate (talking-points-memo)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

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Washington Examiner endorses Romney (Daily Caller)

The Washington Examiner ? a daily, conservative newspaper in the D.C. metropolitan region ? endorsed former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney for the Republican nomination for president on Thursday morning.

The Examiner was clear: Romney is the ?GOP?s best choice? and, ?the only Republican who can beat Obama? in an election they called ?the most important election since 1860,? when Abraham Lincoln won the presidency shortly before the outbreak of the American Civil War.

While acknowledging past transgressions from conservative positions, the paper declared that, ?By fits and starts over the years, Romney has become the reliable conservative that America so badly needs at this crucial moment in her history.?

The editors did not shy from criticism of former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich ? the current front-runner for the Republican nomination and, the paper?s tone suggests, the reason behind the strong push for Romney.

?The Washington Examiner believes Romney can defeat Obama , but Gingrich cannot. And Romney the businessman is far better suited to the nation?s highest office ? by temperament, experience, and cast of mind ? than Gingrich the consummate Washington insider.?

The editors were also critical of Gingrich?s personality and past moral transgressions, comparing him to ?an exploding cigar, waiting to be lit? and pointing to his multiple affairs ? including ?an adulterous affair with a twentysomething aide (now his wife) even as he was preparing the impeachment of President [Bill] Clinton for having an adulterous affair with a twentysomething intern.?

The paper asserted that, despite his objections, Gingrich was indeed a lobbyist who entered Congress in 1978 worth $10,000 and left in 1998 worth $7.5 million. The editors accused Republican supporters of the former speaker of ?engaging in willful amnesia,? and made clear its opinion that ?Obama?s political hit squads? will not overlook Gingrich?s past.

The Examiner is joined in its criticism of Gingrich?by the conservative magazine National Review, which published an editorial on Wednesday night that read, ?We fear that to nominate the former Speaker Newt Gingrich would be to blow the opportunity to win the White House next year.?

The Examiner listed three main reasons for their confidence that Romney would ?make a compelling case that he would be a strong and successful president?: His plans for what to do as president are strong and clear; his skill and experience as a businessman and his faith in the free market are needed for America?s broken economy; and, ?perhaps most important,? his unwavering faith in a strong and prosperous America.

?Romney,? the paper continued, ?has the misfortune of being an earnest man running in an ironic time, and the leitmotif of the Republican race so far has been the search for the ?anti-Romney??

Conservatives, the paper concluded, ?have been searching for a candidate who shared their conservative principles, who had strength of character, and who, above all, could beat Barack Obama. We believe this candidate has been hiding in plain sight. Mitt Romney is not ?too perfect,? as some political analysts have argued, but he is perfect enough.?

The Washington Examiner is owned by conservative billionaire Philip Anschutz, who also owns the San Francisco Examiner.

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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/dailycaller/20111215/pl_dailycaller/washingtonexaminerendorsesromney

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Friday, December 16, 2011

London haunts welcome Sherlock Holmes buffs

Sherlock Holmes fans can prove their passion with a stay at the Langham, which is offering a 595-pound-a-night package that includes accommodation in the Sir Arthur Conan Doyle Suite, breakfast for two and two tickets to a Sherlock Holmes walking tour.

By Jane Levere, msnbc.com contributor

Sherlock Holmes buffs have many things to look forward to this holiday season: the return of the famous detective to movie theaters and the chance to follow in his footsteps and those of his creator, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, in the United Kingdom.?

In honor of the December 16 release of Guy Ritchie?s ?Sherlock Holmes:? A Game of Shadows? ? featuring the stars of Ritchie?s previous Holmes film, Robert Downey, Jr. as the detective and Jude Law as Dr. John Watson ? several hotels in London have created Holmes-related promotions.

The Langham, London ??a landmark hotel at the top of Regent Street often visited by Conan Doyle ??is offering several Holmes-related packages. The more deluxe of the two, priced at 595 pounds per night, includes one night in the Sir Arthur Conan Doyle Suite; breakfast for two; two tickets to a Sherlock Holmes walking tour, with a guide from London Walks, the walking tour company; and the book, ?The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes,? one of whose short stories mentions the Langham. The package is also being offered for 265 pounds per night with accommodations in a standard double room; both packages are available through March 31.

Meanwhile, through January 31, the Park Plaza Sherlock Holmes, a boutique hotel near Holmes? residence on Baker Street, is offering a ?Sherlock Scones?? afternoon tea, including two scones decorated with a profile of the detective, tea or coffee, priced at 6.95 pounds. Guests also receive a quiz with Holmes-related questions and can borrow a magnifying glass to help find answers.

Also in London, every Friday afternoon London Walks offers a ?In the Footsteps of Sherlock Holmes? tour, which visits Charing Cross, the Strand and Covent Garden, sights once favored by the detective. Another must-see: The Sherlock Holmes Museum, at 221b Baker Street, whose study overlooking Baker Street is maintained as it was in Victorian times.

Dartmoor, a region of wild, open country in southwest England, is home to many sights that inspired Conan Doyle and his Holmes tales, like the tors, or rocky hills, of Believer and Vixen, and the Foxtor mires, or bogs.

A special, permanent exhibit at the Surgeons? Hall Museum in Edinburgh, Scotland, where Conan Doyle was born in 1859 and studied medicine at the University of Edinburgh, is devoted to the author and Joseph Bell, Doyle?s professor of clinical surgery. Bell taught Conan Doyle the importance of detailed personal observation of medical patients, a skill famously attributed to Holmes. The exhibit contains letters, anatomical specimens, artwork and other objects that trace the family and professional backgrounds of Conan Doyle and Bell.

Robert Downey Jr., Jude Law and Noomi Rapace star as Sherlock Holmes, Dr. Watson and Sim fight to stop Professor Moriarty's dangerous plans. Opens Dec. 16.

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Source: http://itineraries.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/12/15/9446815-london-haunts-roll-out-welcome-mat-for-sherlock-holmes-buffs

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Video: GOP establishment expresses unhappiness with Gingrich

Get connected at America's techiest airports

If you?ve ever found yourself at the airport hunting for an available outlet or waiting on glacial-paced Wi-Fi, help is at hand. On Thursday, PCWorld magazine released its first-ever report on the Top Airports for Tech Travelers.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3036697/vp/45689363#45689363

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Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Sprint: No LTE-Friendly Hardware Until Second Half Of 2012

sprintlteToday Sprint CFO Joseph Euteneuer said that the company plans on launching 15 LTE-capable devices next year, though they may be coming a little later than expected — the latter half of 2012, to be exact. The company had originally hoped for mid-summer launches with its first LTE-capable hardware, though either date is much later than the competition. Verizon is clearly up and running in the 4G LTE department, and AT&T is getting there. Then, there's Sprint.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/ELvSUg-H4Rs/

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Tuesday, December 6, 2011

US to use foreign aid to promote gay rights

(AP) ? The Obama administration is announcing a wide-ranging effort to use U.S. foreign aid to promote rights for gays and lesbians abroad, including combating attempts by foreign governments to criminalize homosexuality.

In a memorandum issued Tuesday, President Barack Obama directed U.S. agencies working abroad, including the State Department and the U.S. Agency for International Development, to use foreign aid to assist gays and lesbians who are facing human rights violations. And he ordered U.S. agencies to protect vulnerable gay and lesbian refugees and asylum seekers.

"The struggle to end discrimination against lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender persons is a global challenge, and one that is central to the United States' commitment to promoting human rights," Obama said in a statement.

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton is also expected to speak about the announcements in Geneva later Tuesday.

The White House said Tuesday's announcement marked the first U.S. government strategy to combat human rights abuses against gays and lesbians abroad.

The order also directs U.S. government agencies to use foreign assistance to protect human rights and advance non-discrimination, and work with international organizations to fight discrimination against gays and lesbians.

Obama's announcement is part of the White House's outreach to gays and lesbians, a core Democratic constituency. Since taking office, Obama has advocated for the repeal of the military's ban on openly gay service members and ordered the administration to stop enforcing a law defining marriage as between one man and one woman.

However, Obama has stopped short of backing gay marriage, saying only that his personal views on the matter are evolving.

Gay rights groups praised the order as a significant step for ensuring that gays and lesbians are treated equally around the world.

"Today's actions by President Obama make clear that the United States will not turn a blind eye when governments commit or allow abuses to the human rights of LGBT people," said Joe Solmonese, president of the Human Rights Campaign, a gay advocacy organization.

The presidential directive applies to all U.S. agencies involved in foreign aid, assistance and development, including the Departments of States, the Treasury, Defense and Homeland Security.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-12-06-Obama-Gay%20Rights/id-b80007004aa74cfe8219bcadef66ffa9

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Monday, December 5, 2011

iPads become child's play (AP)

NEW YORK ? Make room in the toy box for the iPad.

Crayola allows tots to doodle on the iPad using its iMarker just as they would a crayon on a coloring book. Tweens are able to belt out their favorite Miley Cyrus and Selena Gomez tunes on a Disney microphone that turns the tablet into a karaoke machine. And technology accessories company Griffin enables teens to fly its toy helicopter by using the iPhone as a remote control.

This holiday season, toy makers have turned Apple Inc.'s pricey tablet and smartphone into playthings for kids. They figure in this weak economy, parents will be willing to splurge on toys for their children that utilize devices they already have ? or want ? themselves.

Tiffany Fessler of Gainsville, Ga., certainly was willing to do that even though when she initially bought her $829 iPad she never imagined she'd be sharing it with her 20-month-old son. But whenever she sat down to check emails on the iPad, he'd climb into her lap wanting to use it.

So, Fessler decided to get him the $29.99 Crayola iMarker, which transforms the iPad into a digital coloring book using a Crayola's free ColorStudio HD application that parents can download. Kids can draw and color using the iMarker, which has a soft tip so it doesn't scratch the tablet's glass screen.

"When you have a screaming toddler in a restaurant or any public area, you want to have something to calm him down with," says Fessler, 39. "This is just another way to keep him entertained."

That the iPad and iPhone have infiltrated the $22 billion toy market this season is no surprise. Smartphones and tablets ? particularly Apple products ? are more popular than ever with people of all ages. This year, Apple is expected to double the number of iPhones sold to 90.6 million worldwide, according to research firm Gartner, while the number of iPads sold is expected to triple to 46.7 million.

And Apple products have a certain "cool factor" with kids that toy companies, which can make up to half of their revenue during the holidays, are hoping to tap into. In fact, the iPad and iPhone are among the most coveted electronics this holiday season among kids. About 44 percent of 6- to 12-year-olds want the iPad this year, according to a survey by research firm Nielsen. The iPod touch came in the No. 2 spot with 30 percent, followed by the iPhone at 27 percent.

Not to mention, anyone who's a parent knows all too well that babies and older kids alike love to fiddle with or drool all over mommy's iPad. Nearly 40 percent of 2-to 4-year-olds have used a smartphone, iPad or video iPod, according to a survey by nonprofit group Common Sense Media. That number rises to 52 percent for 5- to- 8 year olds. And even 10 percent of infants have used one of the devices before their first birthday.

"It's mostly something for kids to use in the car or at the doctor's office," says Chris Baynes, a toy analyst. "It's a way to get the kid to be quiet."

With that in mind, Crayola teamed up with Nashville, Tenn.-based Griffin Technology, which is mostly known for selling iPhone and iPad cases and car chargers, to make the iMarker and the ColorStudio HD app for kids. The iMarker, which is like a stylus that resembles a Crayola marker, is targeted at children ages three and up.

"Regardless of who they buy it for, once it is in the household, we know that kids use it," says Vicky Lozano, vice president of marketing at Crayola, which makes the iMarker.

Other toy makers also have gotten into the game:

? Griffin's $49.99 remote-controlled toy helicopter is aimed at teens over 14. Called the "HELO TC," it flies using a device that plugs into an iPhone, iPad or iPod. A free app turns the touchscreen of the devices into a cockpit that controls the helicopter.

? Mattel Inc.'s Fisher-Price unit is selling "The Laugh and Learn Apptivity Case" aimed at babies for $15. The case locks the iPhone into a colorful, easy to grab case that looks like a big round rattle. The case stops babies from making unwanted calls and protects the iPhone from something else: drool. Parents can open up three free apps that play music, read words aloud and count numbers. The company plans to release an iPad version of the case this spring.

? Disney has three offerings. The "Disney Spotlight" microphone, which is $69.99 or $99.99 for a wireless version, plugs into the iPad and allows kids to sing along to Disney songs from shows such as "Hannah Montana" ? or to their own music ? and record their own music video. Disney's $79.99 AppClix digital camera enables kids to upload their pictures to an iPad and a free app allows them add Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck into the photos. And Disney teamed up with Canadian toy maker Spin Master to create "Appmates," a toy car based on the characters from the company's "Car's 2" animated movie. One car sells for $12.99 while a two-pack goes for $19.99. Using a free app, kids can "drive" on different courses by moving the car across the iPad screen.

? Spin Master, which makes toys such as Air Hogs and Bakugan, started a new line this year of toys for the iPad and iPhone called "AppFininity." Its first toy in the line is the $19.99 AppBlaster, a plastic gun for kids over age eight. After slipping an iPhone or iPad touch on top of the AppBlaster, kids can shoot at aliens that pop up on the screen.

Analysts say these toys are just the beginning of a new niche for toy makers. Indeed, most of the companies say they plan to roll out more products for smartphones and tablets ? including some that use Google Inc.'s Android software_ next year.

"I think it's going to be a growing segment," says Jim Silver, editor-in-chief at toy review website TimeToPlaymag.com. "Next year, there will be even more (products) than you can possibly imagine."

___

Joseph Pisani can be reached at http://twitter.com/josephpisani.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/applecomputer/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111205/ap_on_hi_te/us_itoys_for_kids

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