Monday, 5 August 2013

From the editor's Desk: Chromecast a go-go

Chromecast and Moto X

I think I just saved $500 by spending $35.

I'll most likely be canceling my Xbox One subscription this week. It's not that I wouldn't love to have one — I loathe that aging, noisy beast that's currently in my living room. But it's getting harder and harder to justify that much money on some that's mostly been replaced by a $35 USB-powered dongle. No, I won't be playing hardcore games with it, and it doesn't get anywhere near replacing Kinect. But I think I'm going to be replacing my old Xbox with a cheap Blu-Ray player and calling it a day.

But maybe the most important part of Chromecast is one that's gotten short shrift in nearly every review I've read, including ours. Chromecast is in its infancy. Having an SDK — software development kit — means that anyone and everyone can essentially write an app for it. Koushik Dutta — the developer behind ClockwordMod recoveries and Helium backup (to name but two projects) has been teasing a few on Google+. Streaming local files from a phone or tablet. Streaming files from Dropbox. Streaming files from RSS (and wrapping them in individual channel UIs).

And that's just one developer.

Reviews of devices are great. But it's important to remember that Chromecast is just getting started, with the SDK currrently available as a developer preview. It'll be interesting to how the ecosystem grows. You can't yet distribute Chromecast apps. Will it be a walled garden? Wide open like Android? I imagine anything that plays alongside DRM-enabled apps like Netflix will have a bit of oversight along with it.

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/g9yPIqmXHeY/story01.htm

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AP PHOTOS: Crisis-displaced matadors turn to Peru

LACHAQUI, Peru (AP) ? His left knee to the ground, Nuno Casquinha theatrically tosses away his red cloth, muleta and sword and stares down the bleeding bull that is scratching the dirt with its hooves in a haze of rage.

Casquinha pivots, rising to his feet, and turns his back on the fuming half-ton beast, its rack of sharp horns just paces away.

The crowd jumps to its feet and cheers the 27-year-old Portuguese matador whose Iberian elan graces the makeshift ring on the edge of a cemetery in Lachaqui, a tiny town more than 12,000 feet (3,700 meters) up in the Andes.

"If you don't kill the bull, we'll kill you," a group of drunkards shouts, hurling bottles.

Casquinha is unruffled, and the spectacle ends with the bull slain and the matador on the shoulders of an ecstatic farmer, villagers clamoring for his autograph, pleading to be photographed with him.

The Lisbon native is among dozens of bullfighters, mostly Spaniards, who are hoping to gain the fame in Latin America that the economic crisis back home, compounded by rising ethical opposition to the bloody sport, has made near impossible.

The number of annual bullfights in Europe nearly halved to 1,997 last year from the crisis' inception in 2008 and is down an additional 15 percent this year, said Vicente Royuela, a University of Barcelona economist who studies the sport.

When the trim, blue-eyed Casquinha left home early last year, Spain had 765 registered bullfighters competing in the fights, known as "corridas."

He'd only managed to get into one bullfight in the first four months of last year, spending his time instead raising bulls on his parents' farm and training in the family's basement, "imagining all the bulls I would never see."

Even before hard times bit, only 10 percent of bullfighters in Spain got more than 20 fights a year and half quit after six years, Royuela said.

"Things were so bad, with no bullfighting in Europe, that I decided to take whatever I could," Casquinha said over coffee on a gray afternoon in the working class Lima district of San Felipe where he lives.

Peru, his friends told him in Facebook chats, was the place to be. Not Lima's storied Acho ring where accomplished matadors entertain the capital's elite, but the Peru of rugged mountains and unknown backwater corridas where the Spanish tradition is as alive as ever, the bulls have no pedigree and getting gored is best avoided because hospitals are scarce.

"In Mexico, I know, you've got to pay (to fight) when you are starting," he said. "In Colombia, when you discount the big festivals, there are few events ? same in Venezuela. And in Quito (Ecuador), it's prohibited to kill the bull. Peru was the ticket."

Peru hosts 540 corridas a year, more than any other in Latin America, and protests against the sport are minimal and limited to Acho.

Currently, 59 European bullfighters are active in Peru, according to Agenda Taurina, Peru's leading bullfighting guide. That's nearly three times the 2008 roster.

"There are more bullfights than days in the year," said one of the guide's authors, Dikey Fernandez. "The market is jammed."

The pay, however, is modest.

Star matadors in Spain can charge upward of $200,000 for a single performance while novices like Casquinha don't earn much more than $800 a fight. In rural Peru, the European migrants get paid about $1,500 per outing. Normally, three matadors participate in each "fiesta taurina," or bullfighting event.

Casquinha didn't come for the money. And for his first Peruvian fight he said he hardly deserved the pay, failing miserably in May 2012 in Huancavelica, Peru's poorest region. He felt faint in the high altitude. The bulls were also old and wily, which makes them less ferocious and more dangerous and the fight less dramatic.

With the passing months, he adapted to the altitude, the dangerous mountain roads, the public buses, the cheap hotels and the ringside drunkards. He left behind a girlfriend of six years but is now dating a Peruvian.

He's got 40 Peruvian bullfights notched, and his confidence is up.

"I'm going to leave here a winner, a well-known figure in bullfighting. I'll make a mark. I won't return to Europe a failure," Casquinha asserted during one of his daily two-hour training sessions in a Lima park, where he choreographs moves against phantom bulls.

Experts in Spain say Casquinha may be deluding himself.

"The impact for Spain is zero. It only serves for more such gigs in Andean towns, traveling over those god-forsaken highways," said Antonio Picamills, a former manager to such star matadors as Juan Jose Padilla, who he took to the Peruvian city of Trujillo in 1994 to fight a fearsome 1,000-pound (450-kilogram) bull named Pajarito or "Little Bird."

That corrida did nothing to forward Padilla's career, said Picamills, a writer for Dietario Taurino, Spain's main bullfighting guide. "It was only so he could fight during (Europe's) winter."

Casquinha doesn't care to listen to such talk.

After all, this only child is not even heeding his parents' wishes that he return home and forget his matador dreams.

"For me, life is the bulls ? or nothing."

___

Associated Press writer Frank Bajak in Lima contributed to this report.

___

Franklin Briceno on Twitter: http://twitter.com/franklinbriceno

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ap-photos-crisis-displaced-matadors-turn-peru-055723287.html

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Sunday, 4 August 2013

Thief snatches blind man's iPhone at bus stop

by KGW.com staff

NWCN.com

Posted on August 2, 2013 at 5:48 PM

KEIZER, Ore. ? So many of us rely on our cell phones, but probably not as much as a man in Keizer who?s blind.

Earlier this week, someone snatched 29-year-old Josh Bowen?s phone out of his hand and ran off while he stood at a bus stop.

Bowden uses the audible features on the iPhone for directions, to read text messages, and for email.

He also works as an employee at the Oregon Commission for the Blind, teaching others how to use the iPhone.

?They don?t realize what they took from me. To them it?s just another iPhone, but to a person with a disability such as someone who is blind or visually impaired even, these phones, and technology in general, really enhances the quality and independence of their life,? Bowen said.

Bowen has since bought a new phone but it still doesn't take the sting away.

Source: http://www.nwcn.com/news/218174972.html

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Saturday, 3 August 2013

SmackDown Results: Christian def. Randy Orton and RVD in a furious Triple Threat World Title No. 1 Contender?s Match

HOUSTON ? As three of WWE?s top Superstars battled it out for the right to face World Heavyweight Champion Alberto Del Rio at SummerSlam, CM Punk dazzled Fandango with the power of Straight Edge, a stunning turn of events helped decide the Divas Title Match and Damien Sandow showed Cody Rhodes the true value of ?Money.?

Several weeks ago, newly crowned Raw General Manager Brad Maddox gave WWE Champion John Cena the opportunity to choose his No. 1 contender at SummerSlam, paving the way for The Champ to create a highly anticipated clash between himself and Daniel Bryan.

Photos: Guerrero laid down the law?

After SmackDown General Manager Vickie Guerrero offered the World Heavyweight Champion the same chance, Alberto Del Rio tried to name Ricardo Rodriguez as his No. 1 contender. But, The Queen Diva swiftly rejected the titleholder?s feeble attempt at a summer siesta ? instead creating an explosive blue brand Triple Threat Match to determine his SummerSlam opponent: RVD vs. Randy Orton vs. Christian for later in the night!

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Source: http://www.wwe.com/shows/smackdown/2013-08-02/results

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Can crowdfunding be considered social finance? | Blog | Social ...

Social finance is continuing to move into uncharted territory in Canada. However, while crowd equity has yet to barge through the regulatory schema in most Canadian provinces (with the exception of Saskatchewan?see more on its equity crowdfunding proposal here), I decided to look closer at the role crowdfunding can play as a direct competitor, substitute or partner in crime to impact investment.

Before diving into this discussion, I feel that we need to take a few steps back and look at the social finance space, and where, based on its definition, crowdfunding platforms have already and have the potential to fit in. The word social?in social finance typically refers to something which is of benefit to the welfare of individuals comprising a given community. Individuals? welfare within this community depends on multiple factors, including the sustainability and cleanliness of the community and the equity of opportunities available to the community?s members within and outside of its precincts.

This equity of opportunities is precisely what Danae Ringelmann (co-founder of IndieGoGo, one of the world?s largest crowdfunding platforms) stressed as being at the centre of the crowdfunding giant?s mandate?to prioritize the democratization of the financial system. So much so, that, despite the recent controversies regarding crowdfunding fraud (see this snapshot of some divergent uses of funds raised through crowdfunding platforms here), IndieGoGo continues to stay away from curatorship. It prides itself on promoting a faith-based system, which gives every idea equal freedom, and thereby emphasizes the role of crowdfunding as a key tool in unlocking market interests.?

But when putting crowdfunding capital transfers and standard market transactions side by side, do we have an apples-to-apples comparison? When a knowledgeable consumer goes to purchase a product through a well-established platform such as Amazon, is she faced with the same risks as those faced by funders of ?Kobe Red ? 100% Japanese Beer Fed Kobe Beef Jerky? (a fraudulent Kickstarter campaign which almost ran off with the $120,000 it raised through the platform, before Kickstarter axed the project)? And is this consumer motivated by the same drivers as those propelling him to contribute to crowd-funded start-ups? Does groupthink diminish the perception of risk for a crowdfunder? Is there a fragment of altruism associated with giving to a ?collective wallet? to fund an initiative, versus making an isolated purchase?

The question remains: can the socializing of finance be synonymous with social finance? Before you lock in your answer, I would like to put the spotlight on another crowdfunding platform?CSI?s Catalyst. In acknowledging the democratic underpinnings of crowdfunding, Catalyst has sought to do more than facilitate supply and demand dynamics. Its co-founders, Chris Charlesworth and Asier Ania, stressed the importance of educating consumers about the viability of crowdfunding?showcasing crowdfunding as a mechanism for individuals to become more financially engaged. In addition, all of the campaigns on this platform are CSI members, which means that every dollar contributed to a venture through the Catalyst platform will trickle down an intricate supply chain geared toward social growth. A dollar spent here will have far-reaching resonance in the CSI community. Campaigns in the Catalyst world are part of an intertwined network, and accountability and growth are the primary catalysts for the viability of this platform.

Chris and Asier are beaming with the community reach of their platform. They estimate that 40-60% of those enterprises which are funded on their platform are run by women, with those run by minorities not far behind. Since Catalyst is in a sense strengthening webbing within local communities, it could be argued that successful minority-lead initiatives will prompt financial engagement from funders in these minority groups (or vice versa), thereby creating a robust cycle of participation and growth among typically vulnerable fractions of the population. The mission, as Chris and Asier emphasize, is to contribute to a global movement and to internationalize financial participation and social development.

Unlike many other crowdfunding platforms, Catalyst stresses impact as the integral component of those ventures it brings under its umbrella. Chris and Asier stipulate that social causes are more attractive for donors, as people are more likely to see their dollar make a contribution to someone?s well-being. In this sense, social causes should see more traffic on crowdfunding platforms than other sectors. Interestingly enough, this may not necessarily be true for impact investing?where investors who are still operating under traditional financial mandates could reasonably be expected to put their wealth in sustainable food, cleantech, housing, or community infrastructure, says Adam Spence (manager of special projects at the MaRS Centre for Impact Investing). The returns to these sectors, he observes, are more direct and tangible, and provide a more transparent risk-reward trade-off for wary newcomers.

As it stands today, crowdfunding and impact investing are not yet playing in the same sandbox. Crowdfunding is estimated to account for approximately $3 billion worldwide, while impact investing amounts for nearly $5billion in Canada alone. Regulations aside, the potential for growth, according to Adam, is the same for both financial channels; however, it is ultimately impact investing which is more conducive to large amounts of capital to change hands. However, looking at Pebble watch (and the $10 million it raised on Kickstarter), Chris and Asier could not help but emphasize the enormous potential for crowdfunding to be both a complement and a substitute for impact investing. It has the capacity to be both a fund-raising and a market validation mechanism, both explain with enthusiasm.

The idea that crowdfunding failures and successes could serve as investment signals to venture capitalists and impact investors is slowly picking up traction in off-record conversations (I share more thoughts on this in my latest blog). However, the question of the existing and necessary regulatory frameworks is still at the forefront. How can authorities put in place a regulatory structure that will:

  1. Stimulate other Canadian jurisdictions to follow Saskatchewan?s footprints;
  2. Protect consumers against fraud occurrence and intensity lurking in the corners of a generally-unaudited market, and also
  3. Ensure that the democratization of the market is not suffocated in the process?

Should crowdfunding platforms take it upon themselves to do their due diligence and engage in portfolio auditing, much like the vetting process endorsed among microfinance organizations? Is there room for campaigns utilising crowdfunding platforms to self-regulate and instigate community accountability practices? It is evident that crowdfunding is socializing finance, but in order for this tool to become sustainable, credible and relevant to impact investors and donors, we may need to reopen the conversation of how to find an equilibrium between financial regulation and financial inclusion.

[I would like to extend a special thank you to Danae Ringlemann, Adam Spence, Chris Charlseworth and Asier Ania for sharing their candid, insightful and inspiring thoughts and experiences.]?

Source: http://socialfinance.ca/blog/post/can-crowdfunding-be-considered-social-finance

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Friday, 2 August 2013

Ty Lawson: Do's and Don'ts of NBA Fashion

Ty Lawson has proved himself as one of the top point guards in the NBA over the past few seasons. His Denver Nuggets disappointed in the postseason, but they hope to rebound this coming season.?

Lawson isn't only known for his style of basketball play but also his personal style. He broke down some basic rules of fashion for NBA players.

What do you think about his rules? Let me know in the comments below.

?

Follow Lance Fresh on Twitter.

Source: http://bleacherreport.com/articles/1723796-ty-lawson-dos-and-donts-of-nba-fashion

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Source: http://stupidcelebrities.net/2013/08/celebrity-news-3/

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