Friday, March 8, 2013

Thermodo unveils a mercury-free way to measure air temperature on your smartphone

DNP Thermodo brings a mercuryfree way to measure air temperature on your smartphone

If you're the type to eschew the weather report on your smartphone and just, you know, open the window instead, the Thermodo sensor and app that just launched on Kickstarter may be for you. The petite device inserts into (and draws power from) the audio jack of your iOS or Android handset / tab, measures the exterior or interior air temperature, then sends a corresponding audio signal to the mic input on your device. The companion app, along with developer Robocat's Haze and Thermo apps, interprets that signal and displays the temperature on your device -- or you can develop your own with the outfit's open source SDK. The project is now live on Kickstarter where a minimum $19 bid will get you one in black, with the company looking for $35k total for the tooling and materials needed to build them. You can scoot over to the video after the break for more, or check the source to grab one.

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Source: Thermodo (Kickstarter)

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/0uOpGBt3h58/

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Thursday, March 7, 2013

China eyes residence permits to replace divisive hukou system

BEIJING (Reuters) - China's new leaders are planning a system of national residence permits to replace the household registration or 'hukou' regime, a government source said, a vital reform that will boost its urbanization campaign and drive consumption-led growth.

The hukou system, which dates to 1958, has split China's 1.3 billion people along urban-rural lines, preventing many of the roughly 800 million Chinese who are registered as rural residents from settling in cities and enjoying basic urban welfare and services.

Critics have called for changes for years and a government researcher told Reuters a "unified national residence permit system" would be adopted as policy in a document to be published after the current annual session of parliament.

Benefits and entitlement under the new system would be "basically equal", he said, although the changes would be eased in slowly. He did not say how long it would take.

"The trend is to dilute the urban-rural household registration divide", said the researcher, who was briefed on the details but declined to be identified because the plan has not yet been made public.

Previous administrations have experimented with reform on the fringes of hukou for years but have not delivered on calls to overhaul the system, which affords different welfare and civic services to urban and rural citizens.

In a speech to parliament on Tuesday that laid out the blueprint of the new leaders, outgoing Premier Wen Jiabao said hukou reforms should be accelerated to drive an urbanization effort that he said would underpin economic development.

Zhang Ping, head of the National Development and Reform Commission, China's main economic planning agency, said on Wednesday that guidelines for the urbanization plan would be launched in the first half of 2013.

"Urbanization is the biggest potential force driving China's domestic demand in the years ahead," Zhang told reporters.

China plans to spend 40 trillion yuan ($6.4 trillion) to bring 400 million people to cities over the next decade as the new leadership of president-in-waiting Xi Jinping and premier-designate Li Keqiang seeks to turn China into a wealthy world power with economic growth generated by affluent consumers.

Wen said consumption was the key to unlocking the full potential of domestic demand in the economy and would reduce excess, inefficiency and inequality. It would also help deliver growth of 7.5 percent in 2013 - a level China barely beat in 2012 when growth eased to 7.8 percent, its slowest pace in 13 years.

Hukou reform can also unlock the funds of about 200 million rural residents who work in cities as migrants and spend much of their incomes on benefits like medical services and education for their children, which are given free to urban dwellers.

If policymakers successfully harness this demographic shift, China will enjoy continued economic strength, analysts say. If not, it could lead to social and political instability.

UNDERCLASS

"If they don't get it right, instead of growing a middle class, they are going to grow a huge underclass in the city, and that's very scary," said Kam Wing Chan, a population expert at the University of Washington.

"Without granting urban hukou to rural urban migrants it is very hard to turn them into the middle class. They will always be second class," he said.

One of the main reasons the reform has been delayed is money. Local city governments have dragged their feet on plans to give migrants equal welfare, saying they lack the fiscal means to foot the bill.

"If the central government is serious they've got to talk about how to finance this," said Tom Miller, an analyst with GK Dragonomics and author of the recently published book "China's Urban Billion".

The state researcher who declined to be identified said the urbanization plan would broadly put the burden of funding on central and local governments, enterprises that employ migrants and individuals. He did not discuss specifics.

"In doing so we can ensure that some people can transition from being rural to urban citizens and ensure basic public services for this segment of people," he said.

Another key reform needed in the urbanization plan would be new rural land management rules, although the researcher said there would be few details on this.

Peasants now do not have the freedom to sell their land at market prices, which has exacerbated China's wide rich-poor gap and made many reluctant to fully abandon their rural plots.

Officials like Chen Xiwen, head of the Central Committee's rural working group, have cautioned against urbanization, saying it could lead to a shrinking of farms as land is converted to other uses.

Migrant workers have for years lamented inequalities in the hukou system, like the lack of local medical coverage or equal access to higher education.

"In the countryside we generally want to change our rural hukou for city hukous," said Wang Baiqiang, an 18-year-old who left a village in Henan province last month for a job in an Adidas factory in the coastal province of Jiangsu, 14 hours away by bus.

"It's just better if you have a city hukou (if you live in a city)," he said.

(Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/china-eyes-residence-permits-replace-divisive-hukou-system-071336436--business.html

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Correction: Vatican-Pope story

(AP) ? In a story March 5 about American cardinals exerting a surprising amount of control over the message coming out of Vatican City ahead of the papal conclave, The Associated Press misspelled the last name of the archbishop of Galveston-Houston. He is Daniel DiNardo, not Di Nardo.

A corrected version of the story is below:

Americans control conclave message just by talking

American cardinals controlling message ahead of conclave simply by talking ? within limits

By NICOLE WINFIELD

Associated Press

VATICAN CITY (AP) ? The two American cardinals sat on the stage, microphones in hand, fielding questions from the world's news media on everything from the delayed arrival of some of their colleagues to their own wardrobe choices if elected pope.

Most experts doubt the upcoming conclave will select an American pope, but the U.S. cardinals are already exerting a surprising amount of control over the message ? simply by talking. Their lively daily briefings contrast sharply with the sober summaries from the Vatican spokesman and almost nothing from anyone else.

More than 100 journalists and two dozen television crews from the U.S., Britain, France, Spain, Brazil, Mexico, Germany and Italy showed up Tuesday, packing an auditorium for what has become the daily "American Show" at the North American College, the U.S. seminary just up the hill from the Vatican.

Cardinals Daniel DiNardo of Galveston-Houston and Sean O'Malley of Boston held court, gamely trying to answer questions about when the conclave will begin, why five voting-age cardinals still hadn't shown up and whether they'd all be home in time for Holy Week ? all without violating their oath of secrecy about the closed-door deliberations.

"I don't think I can get into anything in particular about what happened in any of the congregations today," DiNardo began.

He then delivered a message that several American cardinals have repeated in recent days, responding to questions about whether the problems in the administration of the Holy See were weighing on the deliberations about who might next be pope.

"Obviously we want to know and learn as much as we can relative to governance in the church," DiNardo said. "The Curia (Vatican bureaucracy) is part of that issue. Certainly we want to discuss and learn what we can, and I think that will go on as long as cardinals feel we need the information."

It's a message that has made headlines, simply because it's one of the few coming out.

"Yes, the American cardinals, by being willing to speak, have filled the media void," said the Rev. Thomas Reese, author of "Inside the Vatican," a how-to guide about the Vatican bureaucracy.

But, he noted, the message is also old. "People have been calling for the reform of the Curia since Vatican II."

DiNardo and O'Malley drew laughs when one reporter asked O'Malley, a member of the Capuchin order, if he would continue to wear his trademark brown robes if elected pope.

"I've worn this uniform for over 40 years and I presume I will wear it until I die," he said. "I don't expect to be elected pope, so I don't expect to have to change."

At the Vatican, meanwhile, spokesman the Rev. Federico Lombardi presided over a more sedate affair, showing a videotape of the three silver and brass flying-saucer-shaped urns into which the cardinals will cast ballots during the conclave, and updating reporters on the whereabouts of the five MIA cardinals.

"Everyone knows how to evaluate his commitments," Lombardi said when asked what the cardinals could possibly have on their agendas that was more important than being in Rome for the election of a pope. "They know they have the obligation and commitment to come for the conclave, and they know the congregations have begun and are making their plans to arrive."

Those still making their way to Rome were Egyptian Patriarch Antonios Naguib, and Cardinals Karl Lehmann of Germany, Jean-Baptiste Pham Minh Man of Vietnam, Kazimierz Nycz of Poland and John Tong Hon of Hong Kong.

Naguib and Lehmann reportedly arrived later Tuesday, while Nycz had to preside over a conference of bishops at home and told reporters in Warsaw he'd be in Rome by Wednesday. The Asian cardinals, Tong and Man were either en route or scheduled to leave later Wednesday, their offices said. Asked why they were late arriving for such an important meeting, the offices said the men were busy handling domestic matters.

Lombardi also announced that the Sistine Chapel had closed to visitors ? one of the first signs that the election was nearing. Workers in the coming days will install a raised false floor to cover anti-bugging devices, as well as hook up the stove where the ballots will be burned.

When asked if he had considered inviting cardinals to his briefings, Lombardi said he thought about it and decided against it.

"The conclave and the path towards it ... is an election that each member makes in his conscience before God," he said in an email. "That requires a reflection by the college as a group that can develop and mature in total freedom."

He said the oath of secrecy also was a problem, limiting how much cardinals can divulge. And then there's the matter of which cardinals to invite given the global makeup of the College of Cardinals.

"If some cardinals think it's useful to communicate, naturally preserving the reserve they've committed themselves to concerning the election, I have no objections," he said. "I do my part helping journalists."

DiNardo acknowledged it was "more American" to brief the media when it was pointed out to him that the U.S. cardinals were the only ones hosting regular readouts of what the cardinals had been up to.

"We want to honor the confidentiality of the discussions, but at the same time let people ? and letting our own folks know at home ? that we are meeting day by day, there are interesting things happening and we are moving ahead," he said.

That sense of accountability ? gleaned after the sex abuse scandal humbled the U.S. church and taught its leaders to be more transparent ? is not widespread among church leaders elsewhere. Only a handful of cardinals from other countries have stopped to chat with journalists waiting outside the meetings; a few have granted one-on-one interviews with media, mostly from their home country. None are hosting daily briefings.

"I love the strategy of the U.S. cardinals," said Iacopo Scaramuzzi, Vatican correspondent for the Italian news agency TMnews. "The others don't do it for a variety of reasons: Some because they haven't developed a culture of church transparency, others because they don't have the means, others don't have time. But I think the European bishops could follow their example."

The U.S. media team is substantive: Sister Mary Ann Walsh, spokeswoman for the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, is running the show, and most of the seven U.S.-based American cardinals have come with a spokesperson. Walsh said she has received "hundreds" of requests for one-on-one interviews with the media-friendly Americans.

American cardinals are tweeting and blogging and Cardinal Timothy Dolan of New York, considered a papal contender, is still conducting his weekly radio show, which will broadcast live on SiriusXM's "The Catholic Channel," on Wednesday from the North American College.

"As the Vatican is the kingdom of silence, especially during those very specific times, this is a real breath of fresh air," said Fr?d?ric Mounier, the Vatican correspondent for the French Catholic newspaper "La Croix," who was on hand for Tuesday's session.

But while such briefings may help journalists liven up their reports, Mounier doubted such openness would improve the chances for an American pope.

"I feel as a consensus here that a U.S. candidate, whoever he might be, has very few chances once in the Sistine" Chapel, he said. "It seems to be just a matter of general feeling against the Uncle Sam. Nothing more than that."

___

Follow Nicole Winfield at www.twitter.com/nwinfield

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-03-06-Vatican-Pope/id-5d8546705608429288c8be7c7ad9cc38

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Wednesday, March 6, 2013

ShoreTel Advances Unified Communications for the Apple iPad ...

SUNNYVALE, Calif., March 5,2013 /PRNewswire/ --?ShoreTel? (NASDAQ: SHOR), the leading provider of brilliantly simple unified communications platforms, including business phone systems, applications, and mobile UC solutions, today announced the availability of ShoreTel Mobility 6 and ShoreTel Conferencing ? two new releases optimized for turning the Apple iPad into a business communications tool, enabling integrated collaboration capabilities, increased accessibility and improved communications, regardless of the user's location.

ShoreTel Mobility 6 delivers a native iPad user interface for enabling multi-modal communications. Users place and receive calls with their business persona (desk phone caller ID), exchange instant messages, listen to voice mail messages and even create multi-party calls by simply dragging names from enterprise directories together with a swipe of the finger.

"We've seen widespread endorsement of BYOD initiatives across the board," said Michael Finneran, principal at dBrn Associates?. "And based on our latest research, Apple devices appear to be coming into the enterprise at almost twice the rate of Android. ShoreTel's focus for making mobile applications easy to use could lead to higher user adoption."

ShoreTel Conferencing for iOS further extends the communications experience with application collaboration capabilities. Users easily share presentations controlled by their iPad or iPhone with remote participants; or can view shared desktops of their colleagues' PC and Macs.

"As more staff members bring tablets to our university, having an intuitive ShoreTel Mobility client for the iPad is more valuable than ever before," said Hernan London, associate CIO, Barry University. "It enables greater mobile communications for all ? while minimizing the demand on our IT department for support."

The combined applications from ShoreTel make the Apple iPad a fully featured business-grade communications device that is brilliantly simple to operate. Users place calls from their iPad using the speaker or a Bluetooth headset, with the same caller ID as their desk phone. Security is assured with integrated VPN SSL encryption that is automatically enabled for the user.

"The Apple iPad has quickly become the most popular tablet brought by users into the workplace," said Peter Blackmore, chief executive officer, ShoreTel. "ShoreTel transforms the iPad into a true multi-modal business communications device ? for placing and receiving calls just like a desk phone, for sending and responding to instant messages, and for easily collaborating with other PC, Mac and iPad users. By combining these applications together in a manner that is brilliantly simple for employees to use, businesses can feel comfortable supporting a BYOD policy to drive effective communications and enhance productivity."?

Pricing and Availability
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ShoreTel Mobility 6 and ShoreTel Conferencing are universal client applications available as free downloads from the Apple App Store. Both applications are available for Apple iPad, iPad mini, iPhone and iPod touch users, with some functionality limited on smaller screens. ShoreTel Mobility 6 voice applications are also available for ShoreTel Sky customers, and SIP-supported IP PBXs from Avaya and Cisco Systems.

Related Links & Conversation

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Source: http://www.virtual-strategy.com/2013/03/05/shoretel-advances-unified-communications-apple-ipad

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Samsung Galaxy S IV design, specs potentially leaked on Twitter

Samsung Galaxy S IV design, specs potentially leaked on Twitter

Even as the secret of Samsung's Galaxy S IV has been handed off to some teenager, the @evleaks Twitter account (which has been reliable in the past) just posted a supposed pic of and specs for the phone. Along with what's clearly a rendering and potentially just a placeholder image of the phone, the specs list a Super AMOLED Full HD screen of unknown size, 16GB/32GB/64GB storage options with 2GB of RAM, a 13MP camera and Android 4.2 OS. A second image shows the same mockup lined up with previous Galaxy phones apparently confirming its status as the largest one yet, although that's not surprising given recent trends. Of course, given what we know about the lengths Samsung went to protect the design of the Galaxy S III (multiple designs, hand-delivered prototypes), you'll forgive us for reserving judgement until the real thing is shown off on March 14th.

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Source: evleaks (Twitter) (1), (2)

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/03/04/samsung-galaxy-s-iv-design-specs-potentially-leaked-on-twitter/

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Tuesday, March 5, 2013

How Word Processors Changed The Novel

Back in the 60s, novelists hired personal assistants to type and retype chapter drafts for their books, dozens of times over. When a technician at IBM heard about it in 1968, he decided to see if the word processor he'd been working on might help. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/3vY1UQQKIHk/how-word-processors-changed-the-novel

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Saturday, March 2, 2013

10 Things to Know for Today

In a photo made Thursday, Feb. 21, 2013, police officer Jeff Strack smiles at children changing classrooms at Jordan Elementary School in Jordan, Minn. In what is believed to be the first of its kind nationwide, the small city south of Minneapolis is taking school security to a new level by setting up satellite offices inside the public school buildings. (AP Photo/Jim Mone)

In a photo made Thursday, Feb. 21, 2013, police officer Jeff Strack smiles at children changing classrooms at Jordan Elementary School in Jordan, Minn. In what is believed to be the first of its kind nationwide, the small city south of Minneapolis is taking school security to a new level by setting up satellite offices inside the public school buildings. (AP Photo/Jim Mone)

In this photo provided Friday, March 1, 2013 by the Vatican newspaper L'Osservatore Romano, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, Vatican Secretary of State, at center with red skull cap, officially takes over the vacant See as camerlengo, chamberlain, before sealing Pope Benedict XVI's apartment, after Benedict left the Vatican, Thursday, Feb. 28, 2013. Benedict XVI became the first pope in 600 years to resign Thursday, ending an eight-year pontificate shaped by struggles to move the church past sex abuse scandals and to reawaken Christianity in an indifferent world. (AP Photo/L'Osservatore Romano, ho)

In this Feb. 16, 2013 photo, Karen Williams poses with a photo of her deceased son, Loren, in Beaverton, Ore. Williams, who battled Facebook over the right to view Loren?s Facebook page, has been urging lawmakers for years to do something to prevent others from losing photos, messages and other memories that otherwise could be accessed at the click of a mouse. This year the Oregon Legislature took up the cause, only to be turned back by pressure from the tech industry, which says they must abide by a 1986 federal law that prevents them from sharing such information. (AP Photo/Lauren Gambino)

Your daily look at late-breaking news, upcoming events and the stories that will be talked about today:

1. WHO'S RUNNING THE CATHOLIC CHURCH

With the pope's retirement, ultimate power now resides with Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone and the College of Cardinals.

2. NO EXPECTATIONS OF BREAKTHROUGH AS CLOCK TICKS TOWARD SPENDING CUTS

Obama summons leaders from both parties to the White House to stake out their fiscal positions hours away from sequestration.

3. WHY 'DIGITAL ASSETS' ARE CAUSING A NATIONAL DEBATE

As more and more memories are stored online, families are seeking access to social media accounts that belong to their deceased loved ones.

4. HOW A MINNESOTA TOWN IS TACKLING GUN VIOLENCE

Police are setting up satellite offices in city's public schools to discourage would-be armed attackers.

5. WHITE HOUSE BOLSTERS GAY MARRIAGE

The Obama administration, in a "friend-of-the-court" brief, urges the Supreme Court to allow same-sex unions to resume in California.

6. WORKPLACE BULLYING GETS HIGHER PROFILE

Advocacy groups and some employers are working to bring an end to toxic work environments.

7. AN UNLIKELY REBEL

The AP's Ben Hubbard recounts the life and death in Syria of a veterinarian-turned-revolutionary fighter.

8. FOUL PLAY IS SUSPECTED IN PRIZED PET'S DEATH

Show dog owner is not ruling out that someone poisoned her Samoyed while it competed at the Westminster Kennel Club Show.

9. ANOTHER KIND OF BUZZ KILL

Two studies conclude that wild bees like the American bumblebee are, at least in the Midwest, dwindling at an alarming rate.

10. THE HEART OF A LION

France's King Richard I, the 12th-century warrior known as Lionheart, ended up with a heart full of daisies, myrtle, mint and frankincense, an analysis of the embalmed organ shows.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-03-01-10-Thing-to-Know-Today/id-60b247e7cd0d418383c2c4b4c334c644

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