Thursday, March 14, 2013

V-moda unveils Vamp Verza: a dockable, device-agnostic headphone amp and DAC for mobile audiophiles

Vmoda unveils Vamp Verza a dockable, device-agnostic headphone amp and DAC for mobile audiophiles

Last we heard from V-moda, the company was appealing to audiophile sensibilities with its $300 Crossfade M-100 portable headphones. Continuing in that respect, today it's officially unveiling the Vamp Verza as a followup to last summer's $650 iPhone 4/4S-purposed Vamp spy tool headphone amp, DAC & case combo. The aluminum-clad Verza is a device-agnostic solution that uses a sliding dock system with special $100 Metallo cases to give any supported devices a similar all-in-one feel to the original.

At launch, a GS III case is available, with an iPhone 5 model a few weeks out -- the company is aiming to get GS IV and Note II cases out next. The unit's 150mW x 2 amplifier will bypass your iDevice's audio output via a USB port on its bottom, while an adjacent microUSB port can take advantage of the external sound card profile found in Android Jelly Bean. V-moda notes the microUSB port acts like a traditional USB audio device, so it'll work with mostly any device. As you might guess, both ports have their own specific DACs routing audio at different power levels to its op-amp.

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Source: V-moda

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/Nhseh-hqUko/

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Senate Democrats unveil budget blueprint

President Barack Obama turns to reporters as he leaves Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, March 13, 2103, after his closed-door meeting with House Speaker John Boehner and Republican lawmakers to discuss the budget. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

President Barack Obama turns to reporters as he leaves Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, March 13, 2103, after his closed-door meeting with House Speaker John Boehner and Republican lawmakers to discuss the budget. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio, pauses as he comments to reporters on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, March 13, 2013, following a closed-door meeting with President Barack Obama and House Republicans to discuss the budget. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)\

House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio, accompanied by House Majority Whip Kevin McCarthy of Calif., and Republican Conference Chair Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers, R-Wash., comments to reporters on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, March 13, 2013, following a closed-door meeting with President Barack Obama and House Republicans to discuss the budget. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Senate Democrats unveiled a largely stand-pat budget Wednesday that calls for $1 trillion in new tax revenues over the coming decade but actually increases spending, while protecting the party's domestic policy priorities and adding $4 trillion more to the national debt than a slashing alternative from House Republicans.

The plan by Budget Committee Chairwoman Patty Murray, D-Wash., blends about $1 trillion in modest cuts to health care providers, the Pentagon, domestic agencies and interest payments on the debt with an equal amount in new revenue claimed by closing tax breaks.

But because Democrats want to restore $1.2 trillion in automatic spending cuts over the same period ? cuts imposed by Washington's failure to strike a broader budget pact ? Murray's blueprint increases spending slightly when compared with current policies.

On the other side of Capitol Hill, House Budget Committee Republicans barreled ahead with an entirely opposite approach that whacks spending by $4.6 trillion over the coming decade, promises sweeping cuts to Medicaid and domestic agencies while setting a path to balancing the government's books within 10 years.

The House panel approved the plan, by Chairman Paul Ryan, R-Wis., late Wednesday by a 22-17 party-line vote. Murray's plan was set to be approved by the Democratic-led Senate panel on Thursday. Both measures face floor debates next week.

Even as Democrats controlling the Senate and the strongly conservative House moved in divergent directions, President Barack Obama again traveled to the Capitol to open a dialogue with lawmakers. Wednesday's meeting was with House Republicans, who welcomed the gesture even as they noted that deep divisions remain.

"We've got a big difference between us," said Rep. Greg Walden, R-Ore. "He supports higher tax revenues."

But Rep. Tom Cole, R-Okla., said Obama told Republicans that he also supports a revised inflation adjustment called "chained CPI" that would curb cost-of-living increases in Social Security benefits and increase tax revenue through slower indexing of income tax brackets. He also supports "means testing" for Medicare benefits that would require higher-income beneficiaries to pay more for their health care.

Cole said Obama told them everyone needs to honestly confront the political barriers to reining in popular benefit programs like Medicare and Social Security. "He said, 'Your people don't want entitlement reform either. Go home and poll them.'"

The White House praised the Senate plan.

"The Senate Democratic budget is a concrete plan that will grow our economy and shrink our deficits in a balanced way, consistent with the president's belief that our economy grows best from the middle out, not the top down," White House press secretary Jay Carney said in a statement late Wednesday.

The debate in the Senate Budget Committee was the first time since 2009 that Democrats in charge of the Senate have advanced a budget blueprint, which opened to predictably poor reviews from the panel's Republicans, who said it's heavy on tax increases and light on cuts to rapidly growing benefit and safety net programs.

"Is it really possible that after four years, the majority has failed to identify any reforms? That all we have is just a tax-and-spend budget that makes no alteration to our dangerous debt course?" said the top Budget Committee Republican, Sen. Jeff Sessions of Alabama. "Does the majority believe the government is perfect and requires no reform?"

At issue is the arcane and partisan congressional budget process, which involves a unique, non-binding measure called a budget resolution. When the process works as designed ? which is rarely ? budget resolutions have the potential to stake out parameters for follow-up legislation specifying spending and rewriting the complex U.S. tax code.

This year, it's taken as a given that the tea party-driven House and Democratic-led Senate won't be able to resolve their differences absent an agreement driven by the president. Obama has had two failed rounds of talks with House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, and now seems to be looking to the Senate as a potential partner with which to spark a potential breakthrough.

In that context, the rival Murray and Ryan budget plans don't seem to offer a path forward. Even a cursory look at them reveals gaping differences.

Ryan's plan promises to cut the deficit from $845 billion this year to $528 billion in the 2014 budget year that starts in October. The deficit would drop to $125 billion in 2015 and hover pretty much near balance for several years before registering a $7 billion surplus in 2023.

Murray's plan, by contrast, promises a $693 billion deficit in 2014, dropping to the $400 billion range for the middle years of the decade. While large, such deficits would hover just above 2 percent of gross domestic product, a level that many analysts see as economically sustainable.

Democrats warn that the slashing cuts proposed by Ryan would impose austerity that would slam the economy into a tailspin; Republicans counter that reducing the drag that spiraling debt is placing on future generations is critical to long-term economic growth.

Ryan's plan embraces tough new spending levels required under the unpopular, across-the-board spending cuts known as a sequester that began to take effect this month. But in order to protect the Pentagon, Republicans cut even more deeply into the day-to-day operating budgets of domestic agencies next year, slashing them from the $506 billion projected under the 2011 debt and budget pact to $414 billion ? an unprecedented 18 percent cut.

Over 10 years, Republicans propose cuts to non-defense agency budgets $895 billion below those envisioned less than two years ago.

House Appropriations Committee Chairman Harold Rogers, R-Ky., responsible for implementing those cuts, is declining comment. The proposed spending cuts, if not changed, are likely to hamstring efforts later this year to advance the annual spending bills for domestic agencies.

Murray's budget, meanwhile, not only preserves the spending "caps" set in the hard-fought 2011 deal but proposes $100 billion in stimulus spending for road and bridge construction, repairing schools, and worker training.

Ryan revives his controversial plan that, starting in 2024 for workers born in 1959 or after, would replace traditional Medicare with a voucher-like government subsidy for people to buy health insurance on the open market. Murray proposes modest cuts to Medicare providers.

Ryan proposes slashing the Medicaid health care program for the poor and disabled by more than $700 billion over 10 years, while Murray would trim it by a negligible $10 billion. Ryan promises to eliminate $1.8 trillion in subsidies in the president's health care law; Murray doesn't touch them.

"There are no sacred cows," Murray said. "We put everything we can on the table, but we do it in a responsible way that preserves, protects and strengthens the programs like Medicare and Medicaid that the American people strongly support."

___

Associated Press writer Charles Babington contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-03-13-Budget%20Battle/id-ba8e3e97ce9f4009aec1c843f3b7dfde

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Pope Francis: A prelate who has preached against 'huge inequities'

The first pope from Latin America has highlighted in recent years the region's yawning gap between rich and poor.?

By Robert Marquand,?Staff writer / March 13, 2013

This Feb. 14 photo shows Archbishop of Buenos Aires, Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio, now Pope Francis I, leading a mass at the Metropolitan Cathedral in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Natacha Pisarenko/AP

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The next leader of the Roman Catholic church combines a Jesuit intellectual mind with a life spent advocating for social justice and the poor, and in 2009 he made headlines for criticizing the government of Argentina for allowing ?huge inequities? between the rich and the poor to develop.

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After only five rounds of votes in the Sistine Chapel and at roughly 8:30 tonight, the phrase "Habemus Papam" or ?We have a pope,? was spoken on the plaza balcony in Vatican City ??and Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio of Argentina appeared, dressed in white, to say the Lord?s Prayer.

The man that believing Roman Catholics call the ?successor? of the apostle Peter, and ?the vicar of Christ? will go by the name of Pope Francis. He speaks three languages, and is both the first non-European pope in modern times and the first from a developing country.

Mr. Bergoglio was elected in a swift five votes of a conclave of 115 cardinals.

According to John Allen of the National Catholic Reporter, Bergoglio was born in Buenos Aires in 1936 to an Italian immigrant family. He was educated as a theologian in Germany, cooks his own meals, and?eschews the ornate trappings of church power ? he travels by bus. He became?widely known for his analysis of the negative effect of globalization on parts of the developing world. At the same time, he opposed the once-powerful liberation theology movement that previous popes denounced as flirting with Marxism.

At a gathering of Latin American bishops in 2007, Bergoglio offered that,?"We live in the most unequal part of the world, which has grown the most yet reduced misery the least. The unjust distribution of goods persists, creating a situation of social sin that cries out to Heaven and limits the possibilities of a fuller life for so many of our brothers."

Like his predecessor Pope Benedict, who resigned last month ? the first head of the Catholic church to do so in 600 years ? Pope Francis is said to be a strict conservative on personal morality. He has opposed Argentina?s gay marriage laws, and has been fiercely pro-family.?In church terms, though, he is seen as a master conciliator who will be adroit at healing many of the rifts and scandals over finances and pedophile priests that have dogged the Vatican in recent years.

Since 1998 he has been the Archbishop of Buenos Aires.

The conclave appeared to steer away from popular choices like the cardinals of New York and Boston, Timothy Dolan and Sean O?Malley, as well as the local Italian favorite Angelo Scola.

Bergoglio was elected by a conclave that overwhelmingly shares the conservative views of Benedict, who has held sway as an enforcer of orthodoxy in the Vatican since 1982.

As Mr. Allen of the National Catholic Reporter writes, ?Either John Paul II or Benedict XVI appointed each of the ... cardinals who will cast a ballot, including 11 Americans, so there will be little ideological clash. No matter what happens,?the church almost certainly won't reverse its bans on abortion, gay marriage or women priests.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/fG8yn9OVZ1M/Pope-Francis-A-prelate-who-has-preached-against-huge-inequities

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Intelligence chief: Budget cuts risk US security

(AP) ? The top U.S. intelligence chief says that budget cuts have jeopardized America's security and safety ? and will only get worse over time.

Director of National Intelligence James R. Clapper told a Senate Intelligence Committee hearing Tuesday that the across-the-board funding cuts have shaved about $4 billion from intelligence budgets. He said that amounted to about 10 percent of national intelligence programs.

Most of the funding cuts have come in the Defense Department, but Clapper said thousands of FBI agents possibly could be furloughed from their jobs. He said operations for collecting intelligence ? through personal contacts and technical spying ? also will be reduced.

But he said the cuts will be felt across the entire 16-agency U.S. intelligence community.

The across-the-board automatic cuts of $85 billion began March 1.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-03-12-Worldwide%20Threats-Budget%20Battle/id-b7014832afe24ca1a4ac9422da048c32

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Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Culture Beaker: When trolls come out from under their bridges, it's bad news for scientific discourse

When trolls come out from under their bridges, it's bad news for scientific discourse

By Rachel Ehrenberg

Web edition: March 12, 2013

Depending on your age, the word troll might evoke a nasty creature who lives under a bridge???or a nasty creature who posts inflammatory comments online. The former, found mostly in Scandinavian folktales, is typically a dim-witted beast, not inclined to help humans. The latter (judgment on wits aside) is also rarely considered helpful. But new research suggests a more nefarious role for these postmodern trolls: Their uncivil, rancorous remarks can influence how readers perceive science.

Social scientists have long studied how and whether argumentative, obnoxious talk may influence peoples? perceptions. A growing body of research suggests that cantankerous rhetoric pushes some deep primal buttons that may override the more reasonable, conscious parts of our brains. One study demonstrated this phenomenon by experimentally manipulating the tone of an imaginary blogger, ?Curt,? who opined about a climate change policy story. Though Curt?s reasoning was consistent, experimenters altered his language to make one post civil and the other rude, denigrating those who didn?t agree. Readers of insulting Curt came away from his blog less open-minded about the policy than readers of polite Curt.

Now scientists are exploring how the comments posted at the bottom of an online story may shape readers? perceptions. For a test case, researchers chose an article about nanotechnology, a field whose fruits are already prevalent in consumer goods (hundreds of sunscreens, for example contain titanium oxide or zinc oxide nanoparticles) but is still largely unfamiliar to the general public.

More than 1,000 study participants read a neutral online news story that discussed silver nanoparticles, comparing risks (such as water contamination) and benefits (such as antibacterial properties). Some readers then read civil-toned comments on the article: ?Well I think the risks of this technology are just too high for the fish and other plants and animals in water tainted with silver.? Or: ?Think of all the clean clothes we?ll have and the germs that we?ll keep our kids from.? Other participants read uncivil versions: ?You?re stupid if you?re not thinking of the risks for the fish and other plants and animals in water tainted with silver.? Or: ?F*&# off! Think of all the clean clothes we?ll have and the germs that we?ll keep our kids from.?

The uncivil comments had a polarizing effect on readers, Dominique Brossard of the University of Wisconsin?Madison reported in February in Boston at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Among people who had already identified themselves as wary of nanotechnology?s risks, those beliefs were exacerbated when the online comments were uncivil. The rude comments also had an effect on participants who self-identified as religious; those people perceived nanotechnology as riskier compared with readers of the civil comments. And people who considered themselves familiar with and supportive of nano?technology became surer of their opinions after reading the uncivil remarks.

That incivility makes people less open-minded is troubling, because it aggravates an already difficult problem. Despite our big brains, conscious thought and ability to reason, we are often unreasonable creatures. Many studies have demonstrated that humans tend to seek out and believe that which reinforces their own views. We?re even resistant to the opinions of people with recognized expertise on a subject; a recent study found that expert testimony presented in congress or in courtrooms rarely changes the listeners? beliefs or attitudes.

Scientists can be the worst offenders when it comes to these known antirational tendencies. They often think that if people just knew more about science they would more strongly support all sorts of research, from climate change to nanotechnology.

A myth that perpetuates this thinking is that the space race era was a golden age of scientific literacy. But several surveys from that era of widespread support for science reveal that Americans? scientific knowledge was pretty scant even as the nation pulled together to beat the Soviets to the moon, Brossard?s Wisconsin colleague Dietram Scheufele and Matthew Nisbet of American University in Washington, D.C., point out in a recent paper. One survey from the time found that only 38 percent of Americans knew that the moon is smaller than the Earth.

Yet science was still held in high regard during that era: about 90 percent of people agreed that science was making life healthier and easier and contributing to social progress.

So what gives? It?s all about framing, the researchers argue. During the 1960s, public opinion about science fit within strong existing frames of social progress and patriotism.

Internet trolls, it seems, negatively frame the science-based debates we see online. Their rancor turns what ought to be open-minded considerations of the facts into ad hominem shouting matches among antisocial dwellers beneath bridges.

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/348927/title/When_trolls_come_out_from_under_their_bridges_its_bad_news_for_scientific_discourse

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Monday, March 11, 2013

Bang With Friends Meme Makes An Appearance At SXXXSW

bwswsxThe one night stand is proof that human beings, despite our fancy computational glasses and smart fridges and our affinity for "higher learning," are still animals. And where else to live like an animal but the Wild Wild West of Austin, TX, host to yet another very sexy SXSW conference? Luckily for SXSW attendees, Bang With Friends is bringing a new product to SXSW, called (you guessed it) Bang With SXSW. A quick trip to www.sxsw.bangwithfriends.com lands you back at BWF, and after connecting you'll see available SXSWers who've registered with the service, along with your usual Facebook friends.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/6NhfouIcqFE/

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Canon Pixma MX522 Wireless Office All-In-One Printer


Basically a beefed-up version of the Canon Pixma MX452 Wireless Office All-In-One Printer that I recently reviewed, the Canon Pixma MX522 Wireless Office All-In-One Printer adds enough extras to easily justify the higher price. Most notably, it adds an Ethernet port, a duplexer (for two-sided printing), a color LCD for the front panel menu, and the ability to print from a USB memory key. The extras make it that much more attractive as either a personal printer in any size office or for the dual role of home and home-office printer.

Like the Canon MX452, the MX522 can print and fax from, as well as scan to, a PC, and it can work as a standalone copier and fax machine. For scanning, it offers the same capability as well, with a letter-size flatbed supplemented by a 30-page automatic document feeder that can handle legal size pages. It also offers the same ability to scan to a USB key, but adds printing from a USB key as well, with the ability to preview the files on its 2.5-inch color LCD.

In theory, given that the MX522 offers both Ethernet and Wi-Fi, you can use it as a shared printer. In practice, however, its 100-sheet paper capacity limits its usefulness for sharing, except for the dual roll of home and home-office printer. Even by micro-office standards, a 100-sheet input tray is likely to empty out often enough to make refilling it a minor annoyance. Very much on the plus side, if you need to print duplex documents even occasionally, the automatic duplexer is a welcome convenience.

Other conveniences worth mention are support for printing through the cloud and support for AirPrint. You can't connect directly to the printer by Wi-Fi to use AirPrint, however. The printer and your phone or tablet will have to connect through a Wi-Fi access point on your network. One other convenience, primarily for home use, is Wireless PictBridge for printing wirelessly from a camera. However, the feature works only with select Canon cameras.

Setup, Speed, and Output Quality
For my tests, I connected the printer to a wired network and installed the drivers and software on a Windows Vista system. Setup was standard fare.

Unfortunately, print speed is not one of the MX522's strong points. When I reviewed the MX452, I pointed out that it was a little slow, but not unusually slow for the price. The MX522 isn't any faster. Given that it costs more, however, the speed is more of an issue.

Canon Pixma MX522 Wireless Office All-In-One Printer

On our business applications suite, I clocked the MX522 (using QualityLogic's hardware and software for timing) at the same 2.1 pages per minute (ppm) as I got for the MX452. In comparison, the similarly priced Editors' Choice Epson WorkForce WF-3520was more than twice as fast, at 4.4 ppm. Photo speed was also slow, averaging 2 minutes 9 seconds for a 4 by 6. The WF-3520 came in at just 1:12.

As with the Canon MX452, the MX522 does much better on output quality than on speed. It delivered better text in my tests than most inkjet MFPs, par quality for graphics, and just barely par quality for photos.

That makes both text and graphics good enough for most business needs, with the graphics output easily suitable for PowerPoint handouts and the like. Depending on your level of perfectionism, you may or may not consider the graphics quality good enough for output going to an important client or customer when you need it to look fully professional. Photo quality is roughly a match for the low end of what you would expect from drug store prints.

I'd like this printer a lot more if it offered higher paper capacity and better speed. However, it balances its shortcomings in both with its output quality for text and graphics and its full set of office-oriented MFP features, including the ADF, duplexer, standalone and PC-based faxing, and ability to scan to and print from a USB key. If you need more heavy-duty printing, be sure to look at the Epson WorkForce WF-3520. But if you don't print a lot of pages, the Canon Pixma MX522 Wireless Office All-In-One Printer can serve nicely for light-duty print needs with an emphasis on output quality.

More Multifunction Printer Reviews:
??? Canon Pixma MX452 Wireless Office All-In-One Printer
??? Canon Pixma MX522 Wireless Office All-In-One Printer
??? Dell B3465dnf Multifunction Laser Printer
??? HP LaserJet Pro 200 color MFP M276nw
??? Canon Pixma MG5420 Wireless Photo All-In-One Printer
?? more

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/ia0rJn_rKhE/0,2817,2416287,00.asp

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Iran blocks VPN access to global web, cracks down on 'illegal' filter workaround

http://www.engadget.com/2013/03/10/iran-blocks-vpn-filters-internet/

Iran's struggle with the unfiltered internet is well documented -- the nation has spent years fending off cyber attacks, blocking access and potentially fencing its own intranet off from the outside world. Sites like YouTube and Facebook can often only be accessed by using a VPN, bypassing the country's internet filter. Sadly, Iranian users may have to get their Harlem shake fix elsewhere: Iran is putting the lid on "illegal" VPN access. "Within the last few days illegal VPN ports in the country have been blocked," explained Ramezanali Sobhani-Fard, Iran's head of information and communications technology committee. "Only legal and registered VPNs can from now on be used."

Registered and legal VPN access can still be purchased, but the typical filter workarounds no longer work. That's not stopping Iran's most dedicated internet users though: one local took to Facebook to confirm that VPN access had been restricting, noting that he was using an unrelated method to dodge Iran's content control efforts. The crackdown may have also blocked access to commonly used sites, such as Yahoo or Google Parliament plans to study the issue more in the coming week, and will presumably tweak the policy as necessary.

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Source: Reuters

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/CL-MuHRkkg0/

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Egypt's urban inflation jumps due to pound's slide

CAIRO (Reuters) - Egypt's urban consumer inflation shot up to 8.2 percent in the 12 months to February, statistics agency CAPMAS said on Sunday, as a sliding Egyptian pound pushed up food prices.

The rate jumped from an annual 6.3 percent in January, putting inflation at the highest since May last year as an economic crisis erodes living standards and deepens anger among Egyptians at a time of political and social turmoil.

February's month-on-month rate also leapt to 2.5 percent from 1.7 the previous month.

Food and drink prices - a major spending item particularly for Egypt's poor - rose 9.3 percent year-on-year last month, CAPMAS said in a bulletin posted on its website.

EFG Hermes economist Mohamed Abu Basha blamed the sharply higher inflation rate on the Egyptian pound's fall, which has pushed up the price of imported food and fuel.

"It could rise more given the ongoing unrest and huge losses in the value of the Egyptian pound of around 10 percent of its value since the start of the year," he told Reuters.

Abu Basha also cited higher prices of low-octane fuel used by bakeries and trucks that deliver goods "which usually have a direct impact on the prices of food and other products".

Egypt has been rocked by frequent eruptions of street violence provoked by a variety of grievances. Two people died in Cairo on Saturday as local people protested about the acquittal of seven policemen over their handling of a soccer stadium riot last year. More than 70 people, mostly fans from Cairo, died in the Suez Canal city of Port Said during the riot.

Analysts say heavy pressure on living standards since the 2011 uprising that overthrew Hosni Mubarak has deepened social unrest and discontent with the Islamist government of President Mohamed Mursi.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/egypts-urban-inflation-jumps-due-pounds-slide-080408689--business.html

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IRL: Scanner Pro, Mophie Juice Pack Helium and the Native Union Pop Phone

Welcome to IRL, an ongoing feature where we talk about the gadgets, apps and toys we're using in real life and take a second look at products that already got the formal review treatment.

It's safe to say we're a little picky around here: Darren's trying out yet another scanner app, and Edgar has settled on a smartphone battery pack (because everyone knows we can't agree on which is the best one). And Philip's been playing with a retro-styled "handset" because, well, why not?

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/_uFMXhTm9yI/

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Friday, March 8, 2013

OEM, NWS to conduct mock tornado drill

Read?more: Local, Weather, News, Office of Emergency Management, National Weather Service, Amarillo Tornado Drill, Amarillo, Amarillo Texas, NWS, OEM, Tornado Drill in Amarillo

Amarillo, Randall, and Potter Office of Emergency Management in conjunction with the National Weather Service will conduct a mock tornado drill today at 10 a.m.

The OEM and NWS are urging area business owners, organizations, schools and families to participate and practice safety drills during this time.

You can also listen in on this drill via the Pronews 7 Breaking News Scanner, to listen live?click here.

Source: http://www.connectamarillo.com/news/story.aspx?id=868698

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