Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Spitzer, Weiner and the New York City road to redemption

NEW YORK ? Why have this city?s once-sleepy municipal elections suddenly become the nation?s most high-profile halfway house for sexually addled politicians?

It would have been enough that Anthony Weiner (resigned from Congress in 2011 in a sexting scandal) has emerged as a surprising top contender in the polls for the Democratic mayoral nomination. Mike Bloomberg, the billionaire Republican-turned-independent, is finishing his third term as mayor this year and will not seek re-election.

But then without warning on Sunday night, Eliot Spitzer (resigned as governor in 2008 in a prostitution scandal) suddenly announced he was running for comptroller, the city?s top financial job that few voters understand or can spell.

New York politics, once dominated by the political bosses of Tammany Hall, have never been for the faint-hearted. Two 20th century mayors (Jimmy Walker and William O?Dwyer) resigned and fled the country in the face of corruption charges. In 2000, Mayor Rudy Giuliani announced at a press conference that his marriage was over without first telling his wife, Donna Hanover, who then refused to move out of the mayoral residence at Gracie Mansion.

[Photo gallery: The return of Eliot Spitzer]

But nothing compares to the way that the 2013 elections have turned into a reality show called ?The Road to Redemption.?

Maybe New York voters are more forgiving than Job. That is basically Weiner?s theory. Referring to the giant front-page headlines (usually with puns dripping sexual innuendo) in the New York Post and Daily News, Weiner told me in an interview, ?There?s a disconnect between [the voters] and the people who write the wood for the tabloids.?

Hand-shaking Saturday afternoon in front of a Trader Joe?s in the middle-class Queens neighborhood of Rego Park, an area he once represented in Congress, Weiner drew apparent comfort from the warmth of his reception. He earnestly discussed stop-and-frisk police searches (?I believe it?s a legitimate tactic?) with a grey-haired woman criminal defense attorney. He tried to find common ground on guns with a burly man wearing a NASCAR cap (?You?re a second amendment supporter, what?s the argument for a big ammunition clip??). And he beguiled an 8-year-old girl and her younger brother with the story of his ill-fated campaign for third-grade class president (he neglected to provide lollipops).

Despite Weiner?s eager-to-please manner, these conversations do not necessarily translate into support. The woman attorney, who did not want her name used, was impressed by Weiner?s answer on stop-and-frisk. But she confided that she would not be voting for him. Why not? ?Two words,? she said, ?crotch shots.?

Spitzer, who radiates the coiled intensity of a former prosecutor, is the kind of in-your-face politician more apt to frighten children than charm them. But Monday afternoon, surrounded by a jostling scrum of reporters in Manhattan?s Union Square, Spitzer seemed in his element as the man in the arena. As he put it, ?I love the maelstrom. I love the screaming. I love the shouting.?

There is nothing rueful or apologetic about Spitzer, who both patronized call girls and prosecuted prostitution rings. Sure, he offered a few mechanical words like, ?I hope that anyone who has gone through what I?ve gone through ? and would have five years to reflect ? would change.? But when I asked him Monday whether he had learned anything from the 2007 Troopergate scandal (as governor he had misused the state police to tarnish a Republican rival), Spitzer huffed, ?That was not a scandal. That was Alice in Wonderland.?

More than Lewis Carroll, Tom Wolfe?s 1987 "The Bonfire of the Vanities" seems an apt guide to the upcoming Sept. 10 Democratic primary (with Weiner and presumably Spitzer on the ballot). In an election cycle certain to be dominated by the scapegrace sexual histories of these two high-octane politicians, the efforts of City Council Speaker Christine Quinn to become New York?s first lesbian mayor seem almost quaintly Victorian in contrast.

So what is the significance of the ego-propelled return of Weiner and Spitzer? Is it just coincidence or the symbol of something larger about New York?s and the nation?s political culture?

Here are a few theories about why these days no errant politician, especially in New York, can bear to wear a scarlet letter for long.

It?s easier to win tabloid headlines than elections: Both Weiner and Spitzer could still be embarrassed in their respective primaries. The polls showing Weiner bouncing along with about 20 percent support against the four other leading Democratic mayoral candidates may partly be a function of name recognition at a time when few voters are taking the race to succeed Bloomberg seriously. As for Spitzer, a Marist Poll last fall found that nearly two third of New York City voters did not want him to run for mayor.

If I can make it here: New York City?s brutal media environment makes the White House press corps all like graduates of Emily Post etiquette classes. Dating back to mayors like Fiorello LaGuardia and Ed Koch, the kind of politicians who thrive here don?t take no for an answer. Ever. Even before their sexual kinks became tabloid fare, Spitzer and Weiner stood out as political narcissists. Is it any surprise that they did not devote years to anonymous charitable works before plotting their comebacks?

The Clinton factor: Weiner?s wife, Huma Abedin, is Hillary Clinton?s closest aide. But talking to voters in Rego Park, Weiner invoked Bill Clinton as the patron saint of political second chances. Clinton?s redemption as both a president who survived impeachment and as an ex-president known for his international good works may have put all sex scandals in a larger context.

In 2013, we?re beyond embarrassment: There were weird elements to the Spitzer (black socks) and Weiner (all pictures and no action) sagas. But in an era when everyone under 40 has posted something on Facebook that they regret, we may be moving towards a Gallic-shrug tolerance of the sexual transgressions of political figures. This is difficult to quantify and runs counter to the moralistic tone of tabloid headlines (?Lust for Power? was how the Daily News welcomed Spitzer to the race). But we may be reaching the point where the only politically unforgivable sin is cheating on a dying cancer-stricken wife (see Edwards, John).

Perhaps the best explanation is the simplest: After a decade marked by deep recession, war and partisan breakdown in Washington, we have become collectively bored with the issues and substance of governing. What we crave is the mindless entertainment of a summer blockbuster. And, boy, is New York City politics providing it.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/-spitzer--weiner-and-the-new-york-city-road-to-redemption-200456854.html

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Microsoft Excel Power User Version 2010

Who should attend?
Attendees must have attended Microsoft Office Excel for Beginners, Intermediate & Advanced or have equivalent experience to attend this course.

Core Content:

Analysing & Organising Data
- Creating Scenarios & Scenario Reports
- Using Goal Seeker
- Using Solver

Conditional Formatting
- Apply
- Delete
- Using the C.F. Rules Manager
- Changing Excel's Default Options
- Working with Data Tables
- Consolidating Data by Position or Category
- Viewing Workbooks/Workspace
- Hiding Sheets

Templates
- Charts
- Spreadsheets

Advanced Functions
- Concatenate
- Isblank

Appendix of Common Functions
- Financial
- Date & Time
- Math & Trig
- Statistical
- Database
- Text
- Logical
- IF
- Sparklines

Phone 0800 SKILL UP (754 5587) or email businesstraining@manukau.ac.nz

Source: http://events.stuff.co.nz/2013/microsoft-excel-power-user-version-2010/auckland/east-tamaki?utm_medium=rss

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Like 4 Real: Burning Man Project Aims To Memorialize The Facebook 'Like' (PHOTO)

  • The Man burns on the playa at Burning Man on the Black Rock Desert near Gerlach, Nev. on Friday August 31, 2012. (AP Photo/Andy Barron, Reno Gazette Journal)

  • People walk toward the temple at Burning Man near Gerlach, Nev., on the Black Rock Desert on Friday Aug. 31, 2012. (AP Photo/The Reno Gazette-Journal, Andy Barron)

  • A man with a creature mask walks the playa at Burning Man on the Black Rock Desert near Gerlach, Nev. on Friday Aug. 31, 2012. (AP Photo/Reno Gazette-Journal, Andy Barron)

  • Burning Man

    Artist Kirsten Berg cleans her art work on the playa at Burning Man on the Black Rock Desert near Gerlach, Nev. on Friday Aug. 31, 2012. (AP Photo/Reno Gazette-Journal, Andy Barron)

  • An old wooden yacht art car rolls through the playa at Burning Man on the Black Rock Desert near Gerlach, Nev. on Friday Aug. 31, 2012 on Friday Aug. 31, 2012. (AP Photo/Reno Gazette-Journal, Andy Barron)

  • A woman walks toward the man on a dust afternoon at Burning Man on the Black Rock Desert on Friday, Aug. 31, 2012. (AP Photo/Reno Gazette-Journal, Andy Barron)

  • People gather around an art intallation at Burning Man in the Black Rock Desert near Gerlach, Nev. on Wednesday, Aug. 29, 2012. (AP Photo/Reno Gazette-Journal, Andy Barron)

  • Burning Man

    People gather at the temple on Wednesday morning at Burning Man on the Black Rock Desert near Gerlach, Nev. on Aug. 29, 2012. (AP Photo/Reno Gazette-Journal, Andy Barron)

  • Burning Man

    An art piece named La Llorona rests on the playa at Burning Man on Wednesday morning Aug. 29, 2012 near Gerlach, Nev. (AP Photo/Reno Gazette-Journal, Andy Barron)

  • Burning Man

    Burners ride their bicycle through the streets of Burning Man near Gerlach, Nev. on Aug. 28, 2012. (AP Photo/Reno Gazette-Journal, Andy Barron)

  • Burning Man

    A young women hula hoops on top of bus while a band play music next to her at Burning Man near Gerlach, Nev. on Aug. 28, 2012. (AP Photo/Reno Gazette-Journal, Andy Barron)

  • Burning Man

    A band play music on top of a bus at Burning Man near Gerlach, Nev. on Aug. 28, 2012. (AP Photo/Reno Gazette-Journal, Andy Barron)

  • Burning Man

    Stephanie King of Little Rock, Ark. hula hoops to the music of a band playing near her at Burning Man near Gerlach, Nev. on Aug. 28, 2012. (AP Photo/Reno Gazette-Journal, Andy Barron)

  • Dust Storm on the Playa, 2012

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/nels0ngal"><img style="float:left;padding-right:6px !important;" src="http://s.huffpost.com/images/profile/user_placeholder.gif" /></a><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/nels0ngal">nels0ngal</a>:<br />A small dust storm kicks up near the Man during 2012 Burning Man Festival.

  • Sunrise behind the Man, 2012

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/nels0ngal"><img style="float:left;padding-right:6px !important;" src="http://s.huffpost.com/images/profile/user_placeholder.gif" /></a><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/nels0ngal">nels0ngal</a>:<br />Many burners dance until dawn then go to the Temple to watch the sun rise. Here the sun is rising behind the Man, 2012.

  • TutuTuesday, 2012

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/nels0ngal"><img style="float:left;padding-right:6px !important;" src="http://s.huffpost.com/images/profile/user_placeholder.gif" /></a><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/nels0ngal">nels0ngal</a>:<br />Julia Nelson-Gal on TutuTuesday uses a bandana to guard against the onslaught of dust, 2012.

  • Love at Sunrise, 2012

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/nels0ngal"><img style="float:left;padding-right:6px !important;" src="http://s.huffpost.com/images/profile/user_placeholder.gif" /></a><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/nels0ngal">nels0ngal</a>:<br />Sculpture on outer Playa, 2012.

  • Ego Sculpture, Burning Man, 2012

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/nels0ngal"><img style="float:left;padding-right:6px !important;" src="http://s.huffpost.com/images/profile/user_placeholder.gif" /></a><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/nels0ngal">nels0ngal</a>:<br />Burners visiting the EGO sculpture at Burning Man, 2012

  • El Pulpo Mecanico

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/KevinAClark"><img style="float:left;padding-right:6px !important;" src="http://graph.facebook.com/3612329/picture?type=square" /></a><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/KevinAClark">KevinAClark</a>:<br />

  • Mobile disco lights

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/KevinAClark"><img style="float:left;padding-right:6px !important;" src="http://graph.facebook.com/3612329/picture?type=square" /></a><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/KevinAClark">KevinAClark</a>:<br />

  • Dancing the burn away.

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/forkfly"><img style="float:left;padding-right:6px !important;" src="http://s.huffpost.com/images/profile/user_placeholder.gif" /></a><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/forkfly">forkfly</a>:<br />Daytime dancing at Distrikt.

  • Temple at sunset

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/forkfly"><img style="float:left;padding-right:6px !important;" src="http://s.huffpost.com/images/profile/user_placeholder.gif" /></a><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/forkfly">forkfly</a>:<br />The dust made the sunsets spectacular. Choosing between the dozens of temple shots I took wasn't easy.

  • Another shot of the temple

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/forkfly"><img style="float:left;padding-right:6px !important;" src="http://s.huffpost.com/images/profile/user_placeholder.gif" /></a><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/forkfly">forkfly</a>:<br />

  • Child's Play

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/forkfly"><img style="float:left;padding-right:6px !important;" src="http://s.huffpost.com/images/profile/user_placeholder.gif" /></a><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/forkfly">forkfly</a>:<br />Even an 8 year old can drive and art car.

  • All aboard!

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/forkfly"><img style="float:left;padding-right:6px !important;" src="http://s.huffpost.com/images/profile/user_placeholder.gif" /></a><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/forkfly">forkfly</a>:<br />My favorite art car on the playa this year.

  • Rumors of a dustpocalyse were highly overrated.

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/forkfly"><img style="float:left;padding-right:6px !important;" src="http://s.huffpost.com/images/profile/user_placeholder.gif" /></a><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/forkfly">forkfly</a>:<br />

  • My fiancee trying on the world's largest skirt.

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/forkfly"><img style="float:left;padding-right:6px !important;" src="http://s.huffpost.com/images/profile/user_placeholder.gif" /></a><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/forkfly">forkfly</a>:<br />

  • Boom goes the man!

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/forkfly"><img style="float:left;padding-right:6px !important;" src="http://s.huffpost.com/images/profile/user_placeholder.gif" /></a><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/forkfly">forkfly</a>:<br />

  • Firedevils dancing around the man.

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/forkfly"><img style="float:left;padding-right:6px !important;" src="http://s.huffpost.com/images/profile/user_placeholder.gif" /></a><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/forkfly">forkfly</a>:<br />

  • Burn Wall Street

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/forkfly"><img style="float:left;padding-right:6px !important;" src="http://s.huffpost.com/images/profile/user_placeholder.gif" /></a><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/forkfly">forkfly</a>:<br />

  • Bike Eating Face

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/xophere"><img style="float:left;padding-right:6px !important;" src="http://graph.facebook.com/1420699758/picture?type=square" /></a><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/xophere">xophere</a>:<br />

  • Safety Third

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/xophere"><img style="float:left;padding-right:6px !important;" src="http://graph.facebook.com/1420699758/picture?type=square" /></a><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/xophere">xophere</a>:<br />

  • Sunrise At The Temple

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/xophere"><img style="float:left;padding-right:6px !important;" src="http://graph.facebook.com/1420699758/picture?type=square" /></a><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/xophere">xophere</a>:<br />

  • Silvi Sunrise

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/Shaun_Beall"><img style="float:left;padding-right:6px !important;" src="http://graph.facebook.com/1514454074/picture?type=square" /></a><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/Shaun_Beall">Shaun Beall</a>:<br />Deep Playa Sunrise

  • Inside of The Temple of Juno

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/xophere"><img style="float:left;padding-right:6px !important;" src="http://graph.facebook.com/1420699758/picture?type=square" /></a><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/xophere">xophere</a>:<br />

  • Reversed Roles

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/Kyriemaria"><img style="float:left;padding-right:6px !important;" src="http://s.huffpost.com/images/profile/user_placeholder.gif" /></a><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/Kyriemaria">Kyriemaria</a>:<br />What kind of message does this send?

  • tall conversation

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/Cheryl_Anne_Barrar"><img style="float:left;padding-right:6px !important;" src="http://graph.facebook.com/1168179011/picture?type=square" /></a><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/Cheryl_Anne_Barrar">Cheryl Anne Barrar</a>:<br />

  • Hug Deli

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/dkcampbell"><img style="float:left;padding-right:6px !important;" src="http://graph.facebook.com/1244731794/picture?type=square" /></a><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/dkcampbell">dkcampbell</a>:<br />Hug Deli

  • The Man Burns

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/sclawson"><img style="float:left;padding-right:6px !important;" src="http://s.huffpost.com/images/profile/user_placeholder.gif" /></a><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/sclawson">sclawson</a>:<br />

  • the man, burning in faces

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/the43k"><img style="float:left;padding-right:6px !important;" src="http://s.huffpost.com/images/profile/user_placeholder.gif" /></a><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/the43k">the43k</a>:<br />reflections from burning man fire

  • The Temple

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/sclawson"><img style="float:left;padding-right:6px !important;" src="http://s.huffpost.com/images/profile/user_placeholder.gif" /></a><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/sclawson">sclawson</a>:<br />

  • The Temple at Burning Man

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/Amy_Karle"><img style="float:left;padding-right:6px !important;" src="http://graph.facebook.com/685410956/picture?type=square" /></a><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/Amy_Karle">Amy Karle</a>:<br />The Temple at Burning Man 2012, photo by Amy Karle

  • Entrance to the Temple at Burning Man

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/Amy_Karle"><img style="float:left;padding-right:6px !important;" src="http://graph.facebook.com/685410956/picture?type=square" /></a><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/Amy_Karle">Amy Karle</a>:<br />Entrance to the Temple at Burning Man 2012, photo by Amy Karle

  • The Temple at Night

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/Amy_Karle"><img style="float:left;padding-right:6px !important;" src="http://graph.facebook.com/685410956/picture?type=square" /></a><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/Amy_Karle">Amy Karle</a>:<br />The Temple at Night, Burning Man 2012, photo by Amy Karle

  • Playa Photo Shoot

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/Theoretically_Maloof"><img style="float:left;padding-right:6px !important;" src="http://graph.facebook.com/1906334/picture?type=square" /></a><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/Theoretically_Maloof">Theoretically Maloof</a>:<br />Peter Ruprecht Photo Shoot

  • The Temple at Night

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/Amy_Karle"><img style="float:left;padding-right:6px !important;" src="http://graph.facebook.com/685410956/picture?type=square" /></a><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/Amy_Karle">Amy Karle</a>:<br />The Temple at Night, Burning Man 2012, photo by Amy Karle

  • Bikes

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/janekenoyer"><img style="float:left;padding-right:6px !important;" src="http://images.huffingtonpost.com/twitter_profile_img/2539315.png" /></a><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/janekenoyer">janekenoyer</a>:<br />Burning Man 2012, photos by Jane Kenoyer

  • Inside the Temple at Night

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/Amy_Karle"><img style="float:left;padding-right:6px !important;" src="http://graph.facebook.com/685410956/picture?type=square" /></a><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/Amy_Karle">Amy Karle</a>:<br />Inside the Temple at Night, Burning Man 2012, photo by Amy Karle

  • Burner Bikes

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/janekenoyer"><img style="float:left;padding-right:6px !important;" src="http://images.huffingtonpost.com/twitter_profile_img/2539315.png" /></a><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/janekenoyer">janekenoyer</a>:<br />Burning Man 2012, photos by Jane Kenoyer

  • Shaman Tent

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/janekenoyer"><img style="float:left;padding-right:6px !important;" src="http://images.huffingtonpost.com/twitter_profile_img/2539315.png" /></a><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/janekenoyer">janekenoyer</a>:<br />Burning Man 2012, photos by Jane Kenoyer

  • Diety

    <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/janekenoyer"><img style="float:left;padding-right:6px !important;" src="http://images.huffingtonpost.com/twitter_profile_img/2539315.png" /></a><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/social/janekenoyer">janekenoyer</a>:<br />Burning Man 2012, photos by Jane Kenoyer

  • Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/07/10/like-4-real-burning-man-project-facebook-likes_n_3568634.html

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    Tuesday, July 9, 2013

    SIM-Free Samsung Galaxy S4 Active Now Available In The UK

    Samsung?s tougher version of their Galaxy S4 model, the Galaxy S4 Active, has been available for a couple of weeks now from the major UK carriers. Consumers interested in getting the waterproof and dustproof device are able to do so but are tied to a two year contract. The good news is that the SIM-free version of the device is now available in the UK and should interest those who don?t want to be tied to a lengthy contract.

    samsung galaxy s4 active

    The cheapest Samsung Galaxy S4 Active available can be bought from Clove which is priced at ?486. The website states that the device will be shipping by July 10.

    Unlocked Mobiles has this model priced at ?494.98.

    Expansys is also carrying this model which they priced at ?504.99 and comes with free shipping.

    Carphone Warehouse also has this device on stock which comes at a price of ?529.95.

    The most expensive model comes from Amazon which they priced at ?676.26 and comes with free delivery anywhere in the UK. The online retailer will be shipping this model out by August 1.

    Samsung Galaxy S4 Active Specifications

    • Android 4.2.2 (Jelly Bean)
    • 1.9GHz Quad-Core Processor
    • 5.0?? Full HD TFT LCD, 443 PPI, Glove Touch
    • 2GB RAM
    • 16GB Internal memory
    • micro SD slot (up to 64GB)
    • 8 megapixel with LED Flash light? rear camera
    • 2 megapixel front camera
    • Wi-Fi ac
    • Wi-Fi Direct
    • IrDA
    • NFC
    • USB 2.0
    • Bluetooth 4.0 (LE)
    • 2,600mAh

    One of the main selling points of this device is that it is built to withstand the toughest environments. You can use it under the rain or in a dusty environment and it won?t get damaged. Its IP67 Rating means that you can submerge the device to a depth of one meter for as long as 30 minutes without damaging it. Its aqua mode allows you to use it underwater which makes it stand out from other waterproof devices.

    The body of this device is a little larger than the regular S4 due to its toughened shell. It?s still sleek looking though and looks great.

    via cnet

    Tags: Samsung Galaxy S4 Active

    Category: Samsung

    Source: http://thedroidguy.com/2013/07/sim-free-samsung-galaxy-s4-active-now-available-in-the-uk/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=sim-free-samsung-galaxy-s4-active-now-available-in-the-uk

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    Adviser departures slow at top brokerages in 2013

    By Ashley Lau

    NEW YORK (Reuters) - Following a year of heavyweight adviser departures at the biggest U.S. brokerage firms, a smaller number of top teams have bolted in 2013.

    The decline, with moves by financial advisers down by roughly a third in the first half of this year compared with the same period last year, is good news for the firms, which typically lose large revenue streams because departing advisers take their clients with them.

    All told, about 200 teams of veteran advisers moved through the end of June, down from about 300 during the same period last year, based on Reuters data, which tallies the moves of adviser teams that manage around $100 million or more in client assets.

    Advisers who moved in the first half of this year managed $40.2 billion in client assets, compared with the $59 billion in client assets managed by advisers who moved in the same period last year.

    "So far the big firms have done a good job stabilizing their advisers," said Alois Pirker, a research director at the Boston-based Aite Group, noting the lower level of departures from the largest U.S. brokerages.

    Greg Fleming, the chief of Morgan Stanley Wealth Management, noted a decline in attrition among Morgan Stanley advisers across the firm when he spoke at the Reuters Global Wealth Management Summit in June, and he and other top U.S. brokerage chiefs pointed to stronger markets as a factor in the trend.

    Strong markets make advisers less likely to leave because the performance of client accounts typically tracks strong markets. The S&P 500 benchmark index was up roughly 15 percent year-to-date through Monday.

    Recruiters and industry lawyers said because of the volume of big team departures in 2012, when at least 16 teams that each managed $1 billion or more in assets made a move, the overall pool of top teams looking to switch firms has shrunk, which has translated into fewer moves this year.

    Advisers often try to gauge the likelihood of their clients moving with them when they decide whether to take the leap. "The biggest issue financial advisers have is if they leave, will the book transfer with them?" said New Jersey-based securities lawyer Tom Lewis of Stark & Stark.

    ADVISER MOVES IN 2013

    Morgan Stanley Wealth Management, the largest U.S. brokerage, accounted for the most departures during the first half of the year among the top four firms, which often battle for the same pool of veteran advisers.

    At least 62 adviser teams that managed $17.4 billion in client assets have left Morgan Stanley since January 1. That compares to 24 teams that managed $6.4 billion at Bank of America Corp's Merrill Lynch, 36 teams that managed $4.6 billion at Wells Fargo & Co's U.S. brokerage, and 18 teams that managed $3.3 billion at UBS AG's Wealth Management Americas.

    "Teams," as tracked by Reuters, typically consist of one or two veteran advisers who move with their client assistants and staff members.

    Numbers at the top two U.S. brokerages are down from 2012, when at least 79 teams that managed $18.2 billion in client assets left Morgan Stanley and 58 teams that managed $21.3 billion left Merrill.

    Morgan Stanley said departures from its top two quintiles of advisers, those with the highest production, "continues at very low levels" and is running below 2012 levels.

    Among the firms that were on the receiving end of those departures in the first half of the year: UBS, which landed a team managing $1 billion in client assets from Morgan Stanley in New Jersey; Stifel Nicolaus & Co, which hired a team managing $1 billion in client assets from Wells Fargo in Washington State; and Merrill, which brought over a team managing $1.1 billion in client assets from Morgan Stanley in Texas.

    SLOWDOWN GOOD FOR BIG BROKERAGES

    The overall stagnation in movement across the industry may be good for Wall Street companies like Morgan Stanley that own the largest U.S. brokerages and rely on keeping top advisers in place.

    A Cerulli Associates report from last fall predicted the market share of the four largest firms would decline to 34.2 percent by the end of 2014. That's a projected drop of roughly 7 percentage points from the end of 2011, as adviser teams depart.

    "Advisers don't want to see their firm in the paper," said Raymond James Financial Inc's chief executive, Paul Reilly, who noted that some of the negative headlines surrounding the parent banks of the top brokerages contributed to the recent departure of advisers from those firms.

    Reilly estimated that more than half of the advisers who join Raymond James, a smaller firm based in St. Petersburg, Florida, come from one of the top four brokerage firms.

    Brokerages can take a hit whenever a big team departs because it's difficult to replace client assets when an adviser leaves. The larger the pool of assets, the more revenue generated, resulting in a bigger loss to a firm when a veteran adviser departs.

    For many Wall Street companies, their wealth management units are strong revenue drivers.

    Morgan Stanley's wealth business, for example, contributed roughly 41 percent of the company's total revenue during the first quarter. An adviser who manages $100 million in client assets typically generates annual revenue of $1 million.

    The slowdown in adviser departures so far this year has kept many of those assets in place.

    "Numbers are pretty much down across the board," Ron Edde, a California-based financial services recruiter, said, though he warned the trend might change in the second half of the year if markets stabilize and advisers see a need to switch firms. "We may see a strong second half."

    (Reporting by Ashley Lau; Editing by Lauren Young and Leslie Adler)

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/adviser-departures-slow-top-brokerages-2013-190603348.html

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    The Difference Between Innovation and Disruption, and Why China Needs the Latter

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    Why China Doesn?t Produce Disruptive Technologies?Yet

    Last Friday, I wrote an article about why China doesn?t produce many disruptive technologies, in which I argued that China?s political system is biased towards maintaining the status quo in industries like internet and telecommunications, where state-owned firms dominate. In response, I got a lot of arguments like this:

    That?s misleading. The real reason China doesn?t innovate is that it doesn?t have a mature enough (or risk-taking enough) investment environment or strong enough IP laws, so big new ideas often can?t get the funding and protection they need to grow and thrive.

    That?s all very true, but innovativeness and disruptiveness are not the same thing. And especially in China, where foreign players are often shut out of the market either by legislation or by the formidable language and culture barriers, a product does not need to be innovative at all to be highly disruptive.

    Let?s steal an example from my original post and talk about WeChat. WeChat is a highly disruptive product, so much so that China?s state-owned telecoms are up in arms about it destroying their SMS and phone calling services by offering basically the same thing for free. And they?re right to be worried. WeChat is poised to more or less replace the regular functions of phones, and if the government doesn?t step in, China?s telecom market and users? mobile talk and chat habits will probably look very different even 5 years from now. Now that?s disruptive.

    Yet WeChat is not, by any stretch of the imagination, an innovative product. It came out well after Whatsapp, but even in Asia it was mimicking the features of mobile apps KakaoTalk and Xiaomi?s Miliao, both of which were launched in 2010 (WeChat didn?t hit the scene until 2011). If innovation is the introduction of new ideas or products; WeChat wasn?t innovative at all; the idea behind it was already widespread and a very similar product was already available in the Chinese market.

    Protecting and fostering innovation is important from an industry perspective, but disruption is more important from a user perspective. After all, most WeChat users don?t care that Xiaomi and KakaoTalk had the idea first; what?s important to them is being able to use the app to chat with their friends in new ways. The same is true of the taxi apps many Chinese cities have blocked or restricted. Users don?t care if they?re innovative, they just want to be able to find taxis easily. And these apps could help them do that and change the taxi industry in the process, if the government wasn?t getting in the way.

    More investment money wouldn?t fix that ? many of these apps are operated by major internet companies that have tons of cash floating around. And China?s lack of IP protection, while a serious problem, isn?t what?s preventing these apps from taking off and changing China?s transportation industry. In many cases, it?s the government that ultimately decides whether or not it will permit tech companies to disrupt the industries they operate in, and success isn?t guaranteed even if you have the right idea and the right amount of money if your idea threatens a status quo that benefits government officials or the state-owned firms they control. And when the government says no to industry-changing disruptive ideas*, the ultimate losers are generally China?s end-users.

    *There are plenty of examples of this happening, by the way, and sometimes it even prevents state-owned companies from disrupting their own industries! For example, China Mobile already has pretty mature 4G LTE technology, and it has been operating a commercial 4G network in Hong Kong for well over a year. But mainland users still can?t access 4G because regulators reportedly don?t want to disrupt the growth of China?s 3G industry yet.

    Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/PennOlson/~3/Falt0e9gVSE/

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    'Scent device' could help detect bladder cancer

    Researchers from the University of Liverpool and University of the West of England, (UWE Bristol), have built a device that can read odours in urine to help diagnose patients with early signs of bladder cancer.

    There are currently no reliable biomarkers to screen patients for bladder cancer in the same way that there are for breast and cervical cancers. Previous research has suggested that a particular odour in the urine could be detected by dogs trained to recognise the scent, indicating that methods of diagnoses could be based on the smell of certain gases.

    The team have now built a device, called ODOREADER that contains a sensor which responds to chemicals in gas emitted from urine. The device, constructed in the laboratories at UWE Bristol's Institute of Biosensor Technology, analyses this gas and produces a 'profile' of the chemicals in urine that can be read by scientists to diagnose the presence of cancer cells in the bladder.

    Professor Chris Probert, from the University of Liverpool's Institute of Translational Medicine, explains: "Each year approximately 10,000 people in the UK are diagnosed with bladder cancer. It is a disease that, if caught early, can be treated effectively, but unfortunately we do not have any early screening methods other than diagnosis through urine tests at the stage when it starts to become a problem."

    The device works by inserting a bottle containing the urine sample into the device. About 30 minutes later the ODOREADER is capable of showing the diagnosis on the computer screen if the sample derives from a patient with bladder cancer.

    Professor Norman Ratcliffe, from the Institute of Biosensor Technology at UWE Bristol, said: "It is thought that dogs can smell cancer, but this is obviously not a practical way for hospitals to diagnose the disease. Taking this principle, however, we have developed a device that can give us a profile of the odour in urine. It reads the gases that chemicals in the urine can give off when the sample is heated."

    Professor Probert added: "We looked at 98 samples of urine to develop the device, and tested it on 24 patient samples known to have cancer and 74 samples that have urological symptoms, but no cancer. The device correctly assigned 100% of cancer patients.

    "Bladder cancer is said to be the most expensive cancer to treat, due to repeated scopes to inspect the development of the cancer cells in the bladder. ODOREADER has the potential to dramatically cut these costs by preventing scopes.

    "These results are very encouraging for the development of new diagnostic tools for bladder cancer, but we now need to look at larger samples of patients to test the device further before it can be used in hospitals."

    More information: The work, also in collaboration with Bristol Urological Institute, is published in the journal PLOS ONE.

    Journal reference: PLoS ONE

    Provided by University of Liverpool

    Source: http://medicalxpress.com/news/2013-07-scent-device-bladder-cancer.html

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