Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Baltimore, MD 2003 Hyundai Elantra New Sedan Glen Burnie, MD Annapolis, MD Bob Bell Ford/ Hyundai/ Kia for $

  • Ocean_blue
  • H131046A
  • 2.0L 4 cyls
  • KMHDN45D13U495775
  • 120,792 mi.
  • FWD Sedan (4 Door)

?

  • Convenience

    • Air conditioning
    • Center Console - Full with covered storage
    • Speed-proportional power steering
    • Tilt steering wheel
    • Clock - In-dash
    • Tachometer
    • Power heated mirrors
    • Power windows with 1 one-touch
    • Rear defogger
  • Exterior

    • Chrome grill
    • Intermittent window wipers
    • Privacy/tinted glass
  • Interior

    • Rear bench seats
    • Front seat type - Bucket
  • Safety

  • Technical

    • 135 horsepower
    • 2.0 liter inline 4 cylinder DOHC engine
    • 4 Doors
    • Front-wheel drive

?

Contact Us at (800) 417-5352
The price shown includes all incentives and rebates, therefore it's subject to change as incentives change (you may have to qualify for some rebates like valued owner, competitive make, or military. ?COLLEGE STUDENTS SAVE ADDITIONAL $$$! ? The E-Price excludes tax, tags, freight, and $200 processing charge. ? Rebates and incentives may be in lieu of special financing. Certain incentives may require financing through manufacturer's financial services.?Price cannot be combined with other offers or coupons. Pricing assumes in stock availability. To receive this special price you must work directly through our Internet Department. Michael Fitzpatrick ? Dave Kearns - Chris Mills -? Brendan Fitzpatrick - Brittany Parthemore?- ?Note: All vehicles subject to prior sale. We reserve the right to make changes without notice, and are not responsible for errors or omissions.

EPA mileage estimates are for newly manufactured vehicles only. Your actual mileage will vary depending on how you drive and maintain your vehicle.

Before purchasing this vehicle, it is your responsibility to address any and all differences between information on this website and the actual vehicle specifications and/or any warranties offered prior to the sale of this vehicle. Vehicle data on this website is compiled from publicly available sources believed by the publisher to be reliable. Vehicle data is subject to change without notice. The publisher assumes no responsibility for errors and/or omissions in this data the compilation of this data and makes no representations express or implied to any actual or prospective purchaser of the vehicle as to the condition of the vehicle, vehicle specifications, ownership, vehicle history, equipment/accessories, price or warranties. 2003 Hyundai Baltimore, MD 2003 Hyundai Glen Burnie, MD 2003 Hyundai Annapolis, MD

Source: http://bobbellhyundai.com/2003-Hyundai-Elantra-Baltimore-MD/vd/16198181

smokey robinson smokey robinson USA VS Mexico Alexis DeJoria Tubby Smith opm passover

Monday, August 12, 2013

More realistic simulated cloth for more realistic video games and movies

More realistic simulated cloth for more realistic video games and movies [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 12-Aug-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Ioana Patringenaru
ipatrin@ucsd.edu
858-822-0899
University of California - San Diego

Computer scientists develop new model to simulate cloth on a computer with unprecedented accuracy

Computer scientists at the University of California, San Diego, have developed a new model to simulate with unprecedented accuracy on the computer the way cloth and light interact. The new model can be used in animated movies and in video games to make cloth look more realistic.

Existing models are either too simplistic and produce unrealistic results; or too complex and costly for practical use. Researchers presented their findings at the SIGGRAPH 2013 conference held July 21 to 25 in Anaheim, Calif.

"Not only is our model easy to use, it is also more powerful than existing models," said Iman Sadeghi, who developed the model while working on his Ph.D. in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering at UC San Diego. He currently works for Google in Los Angeles, after earning his Ph.D. in 2011.

"The model solves the long standing problem of rendering cloth," said Sadeghi's Ph.D. advisor Henrik Wann Jensen, who earned an Academy Award in 2004 for research that brought lifelike skin to animated characters and was later used in many Hollywood block busters, including "Lord of the Rings." "Cloth in movies and games often looks wrong, and this model is the first practical way of controlling the appearance of most types of cloth in a realistic way."

The model is based on a novel approach that simulates the interaction of light with cloth by simulating how each thread scatters light. The model then uses that information based on the fabric's weaving pattern. "It essentially treats the fabric as a mesh of interwoven microcylinders, which scatter light the same way as hair, but are oriented at 90 degrees from each other," Sadeghi said.

Sadeghi is an expert on the subject of simulating light interacting with hair. While a Ph.D. student in Jensen's research group, he developed a model that does just that and that was later used in Disney's "Tangled," a retelling of the Brothers Grimm fairy tale Rapunzel. The animated movie's main character sported 70 feet of simulated blond hair.

"In addition to faithfully reproducing the appearance of existing fabrics, our model can act as a framework to visualize what new fabrics would look like. We can simulate any combination of weaving pattern and thread types," said Oleg Bisker, who co-authored the paper as part of his master's thesis on measuring and modeling light scattering from threads.

Sadeghi and Bisker presented the work at SIGGRAPH and fielded many questions from researchers in the game and movie industries. "We expect that our model will be used in many production pipelines soon," Sadeghi added.

Sadeghi and colleagues used the model to simulate the appearance of a very complex fabric for the first timemore specifically a polyester satin charmeuse. That fabric is particularly tricky to render, because of its unusual weaving pattern, which gives it a different appearance depending on what direction and what side it is observed from. For example, in one direction, the satin charmeuse has three mirror-like highlights on the front side of the fabric and four on the back.

To gain a deeper understanding, Sadeghi and colleagues took photographs of fabrics and even measured the scattering properties of single threads. The researchers had their "a-ha!" moment for developing the model while looking at the fabric's weaving patterns under a microscope. That's when they realized that these patterns accounted for the way the light scattered on the fabrics, creating distinct highlights and overall appearance.

In their SIGGRAPH paper, the authors also simulated other types of fabric like plain linen and a silk crepe de chine. Their goal was to demonstrate the model's ability to handle different types of thread and an unlimited variety of weaving patterns. The only other models that may be able to produce similar results to the one Sadeghi and colleagues developed put fabrics through a micro-CT-scan, an expensive and time-consuming procedure.

The other computer scientist working on the paper was Joachim De Deken, a master's student, who took measurements of fabrics.

###


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


More realistic simulated cloth for more realistic video games and movies [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 12-Aug-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Ioana Patringenaru
ipatrin@ucsd.edu
858-822-0899
University of California - San Diego

Computer scientists develop new model to simulate cloth on a computer with unprecedented accuracy

Computer scientists at the University of California, San Diego, have developed a new model to simulate with unprecedented accuracy on the computer the way cloth and light interact. The new model can be used in animated movies and in video games to make cloth look more realistic.

Existing models are either too simplistic and produce unrealistic results; or too complex and costly for practical use. Researchers presented their findings at the SIGGRAPH 2013 conference held July 21 to 25 in Anaheim, Calif.

"Not only is our model easy to use, it is also more powerful than existing models," said Iman Sadeghi, who developed the model while working on his Ph.D. in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering at UC San Diego. He currently works for Google in Los Angeles, after earning his Ph.D. in 2011.

"The model solves the long standing problem of rendering cloth," said Sadeghi's Ph.D. advisor Henrik Wann Jensen, who earned an Academy Award in 2004 for research that brought lifelike skin to animated characters and was later used in many Hollywood block busters, including "Lord of the Rings." "Cloth in movies and games often looks wrong, and this model is the first practical way of controlling the appearance of most types of cloth in a realistic way."

The model is based on a novel approach that simulates the interaction of light with cloth by simulating how each thread scatters light. The model then uses that information based on the fabric's weaving pattern. "It essentially treats the fabric as a mesh of interwoven microcylinders, which scatter light the same way as hair, but are oriented at 90 degrees from each other," Sadeghi said.

Sadeghi is an expert on the subject of simulating light interacting with hair. While a Ph.D. student in Jensen's research group, he developed a model that does just that and that was later used in Disney's "Tangled," a retelling of the Brothers Grimm fairy tale Rapunzel. The animated movie's main character sported 70 feet of simulated blond hair.

"In addition to faithfully reproducing the appearance of existing fabrics, our model can act as a framework to visualize what new fabrics would look like. We can simulate any combination of weaving pattern and thread types," said Oleg Bisker, who co-authored the paper as part of his master's thesis on measuring and modeling light scattering from threads.

Sadeghi and Bisker presented the work at SIGGRAPH and fielded many questions from researchers in the game and movie industries. "We expect that our model will be used in many production pipelines soon," Sadeghi added.

Sadeghi and colleagues used the model to simulate the appearance of a very complex fabric for the first timemore specifically a polyester satin charmeuse. That fabric is particularly tricky to render, because of its unusual weaving pattern, which gives it a different appearance depending on what direction and what side it is observed from. For example, in one direction, the satin charmeuse has three mirror-like highlights on the front side of the fabric and four on the back.

To gain a deeper understanding, Sadeghi and colleagues took photographs of fabrics and even measured the scattering properties of single threads. The researchers had their "a-ha!" moment for developing the model while looking at the fabric's weaving patterns under a microscope. That's when they realized that these patterns accounted for the way the light scattered on the fabrics, creating distinct highlights and overall appearance.

In their SIGGRAPH paper, the authors also simulated other types of fabric like plain linen and a silk crepe de chine. Their goal was to demonstrate the model's ability to handle different types of thread and an unlimited variety of weaving patterns. The only other models that may be able to produce similar results to the one Sadeghi and colleagues developed put fabrics through a micro-CT-scan, an expensive and time-consuming procedure.

The other computer scientist working on the paper was Joachim De Deken, a master's student, who took measurements of fabrics.

###


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-08/uoc--mrs081213.php

jobs act greg mortenson jim marshall died 2013 toyota avalon the secret life of bees full moon aubrey o day

Digital game helps tag College photo archives [The Dartmouth]

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

Source: www.tk421.net --- Sunday, August 11, 2013
...

Source: http://thedartmouth.com/2011/05/25/news/metadata

chechnya live news nbc UMass Dartmouth Katherine Russell MBTA Fox News Live

Sunday, August 11, 2013

Family: US man detained in N. Korea hospitalized

SEATTLE (AP) ? An American man detained in North Korea for the past nine months has been hospitalized after losing more than 50 pounds, and the need to bring him home is becoming more urgent, his sister said Sunday.

Kenneth Bae, a 45-year-old tour operator and Christian missionary, was arrested last November and accused of subversive activities against the government. He was sentenced in May to 15 years hard labor, and in letters to his family in the Seattle area he described working in the fields weeding and planting beans and potatoes.

His sister, Terri Chung, of Edmonds, said Sunday the family recently learned that he has been transferred from the labor camp to a hospital. Her brother suffers from diabetes, an enlarged heart, liver problems and back pain, she said.

"He's considerably weaker," Chung said. "There's more urgency than ever to bring him home."

A deputy ambassador from Sweden met with Bae at the hospital Friday, Chung said. Sweden represents American interests in North Korea because the U.S. has no official diplomatic relations with the country.

Bae, a father of three, was born in South Korea and immigrated to the U.S. with his parents and sister in 1985. For the past seven years he has been living in China, and a couple of years ago began leading small tour groups, mostly of American and Canadian citizens, into a "special economic zone" designed to encourage commerce in the northeastern region of Roson in North Korea, Chung said.

Several years ago, Bae gave a sermon in which he advocated bringing Americans to North Korea for a mass prayer session to bring about the reunification of North and South Korea. The charges against him included "hostile acts" against the government.

Bae is at least the sixth American detained in North Korea since 2009. The others were eventually allowed to leave without serving out their terms, some after prominent Americans, including former presidents Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter, visited North Korea.

The State Department has called for his release on humanitarian grounds.

Bae's recent letters to his family urged them to take a more prominent role in advocating for his release, and on Saturday night they held a prayer vigil at a Seattle church to publicize his case. About 180 people attended, said Chung, who teaches English composition at a Seattle community college.

Bae's son has started an online petition calling for his freedom.

___

Follow Johnson at https://twitter.com/GeneAPseattle

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/family-us-man-detained-n-korea-hospitalized-164317213.html

doma aaron hernandez aaron hernandez today show Wendy Davis Jordan Ozuna Federer

Saturday, August 10, 2013

Google Wallet to stop NFC loyalty points and gift cards

Users of the credit card and cash replacement system are advised to spend any remaining gift card balances before August 21.

On that date, Google will be disabling the NFC functionality for any gift or loyalty cards that users store in their Google Wallet. However, for those that have physical gift cards, there's no need to panic as the change will not affect them.

Google Wallet's ultimate aim is to consign debit cards, credit cards, cash and even physical coupons, loyalty cards and gift vouchers to the history books in favor of a unified virtual system that lives inside users' NFC-enabled smartphones.

The idea is that instead of fishing around in a pocket for coins, cards and tokens, simply tap a phone on the contactless payment sensor and everything is done automatically. Rewards points are redeemed or added, payments are taken from a designated account and everybody's happy.

However, since the service was launched in 2011, it has failed to capture the public's imagination, despite the fact that Google has continued to add new features and uses to it.

One of the problems that not just Google, but all other companies in the virtual wallet market face is that very few shops and stores are prepared to invest in the point of sales devices that enable consumers to pay for goods via a phone. Likewise, consumers are not prepared to sign up for the services until more shops are set up to accept payments from a phone. And of course a smartphone needs to support NFC (Near Field Communication) in order to use the app, a feature that not all companies build into their handsets.

Google hasn't clarified why it is disabling the NFC gift and loyalty card feature but has revealed that it is working on a solution and will release more details "soon".

Source: http://www.denverpost.com/technology/ci_23834963/google-wallet-stop-nfc-loyalty-points-and-gift?source=rss

Tsunami Lil Reese Hurricane Sandy Nyc Saanvi Venna vikings Colin Powell noaa

Thursday, August 8, 2013

Usher?s 5-Yr-Old Son In ICU After Near Drowning Accident!

Usher’s 5-Yr-Old Son In ICU After Near Drowning Accident!

Usher Raymond V freak accidentUsher’s oldest son, Usher Raymond V, was rushed to a hospital in Atlanta, Georgia following an accident in the singer’s pool on Monday evening. Usher Raymond V nearly drowned when his hand became stuck in the pool’s drain while he was trying to retrieve a pool toy. The child was playing in the pool with ...

Usher’s 5-Yr-Old Son In ICU After Near Drowning Accident! Stupid Celebrities Gossip Stupid Celebrities Gossip News

Source: http://stupidcelebrities.net/2013/08/ushers-5-yr-old-son-in-icu-after-near-drowning-accident/

neighborhood watch dodgers sale tami roman jetblue captain los angeles dodgers christie brinkley seattle mariners

Saturday, August 3, 2013

India's Acid Burn Victims Crowdsource Treatment Costs After Attacks

Screen Shot 2013-08-02 at 3.56.17 PMIndians bear witness to an estimated 1,000 acid attacks a year, largely against women rejecting unwanted marriage proposals or defending themselves against male attackers. Now, the women, often from impoverished backgrounds, are crowdfunding the thousands of dollars it costs to treat their wounds.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/HJN785LRSPk/

Doug Martin Barack Obama & Joe Biden Am I registered to vote Voter registration Election Election results 2012 exit polls

Microsoft's new logo is big business for one Seattle sign-maker (slide show)

BUSINESS JOURNAL | Karen Ducey

Kelly Garrett, account executive for Trade-Marx, with a company banner and signs. Trade-Marx is a small Seattle sign company that has been contracted by Microsoft to replace all its signs with new ones reflecting their new company logo.

Last year, Microsoft changed its logo. It ditched the old "waving flag" version of the Window and introduced a simpler four-block design. It was crisp, clean. Designers discussed it. Bloggers extrapolated what the design meant about the future of the company.

But one Seattle company jumped into high gear. Trade-Marx has been building high-end signs in Seattle since 1969 and, late last year, it won the contract to build 350 new signs for Microsoft's Redmond and Bellevue campuses.

The company, which builds the signs by hand in a warehouse in Seattle's Sodo neighborhood, actually built the first Microsoft sign 30 years ago, and has been the exclusive sign-maker for Boeing for 24 years. Founder Don Jarvis hand-painted the first Red Robin restaurant sign in 1969, and the company has done the signs for the Chihuly Garden and Glass, EMP Jumbotron, University of Washington tower and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

This new contract for Microsoft, though, is the largest single contract Trade-Marx has ever had; the company has been working exclusively on the Microsoft contract since April. Recently, Trade-Marx installed the new signs on Microsoft's high-rise buildings in Bellevue.

"The economy has been slow, but now people are buying signs again," said Kelly Garrett, who was the Trade-Marx project manager for the Microsoft signs.

"It's a good sign Microsoft is doing this now," he added without a hint of irony.

So, what's next for Trade-Marx? Garrett and his team of 35 sign-makers will begin a project for the Pike Place Market replacing the current signage with 75 new signs which, he said, will help make it easier for visitors find their way around the market.

For more on Trade-Marx, see the story in the July 26 print edition of the Puget Sound Business Journal (subscription required for the first 30 days).

Emily Parkhurst covers the technology industry for the Puget Sound Business Journal/TechFlash.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TechFlash/~3/KurEgjp1mgE/microsofts-new-logo-is-big-business.html

kim kardashian flour matt forte jeremy shockey new orleans saints ireland vangogh yield

How Much Is a Life Worth?

To Ken Feinberg, if you lose both your legs, you?re as good as dead.

Here, in the world of the living, inspirational media stories after the Boston Marathon bombings featured survivors who persevered, grittily relearning to walk atop state-of-the-art prosthetic limbs, fighting for normalcy with each new step. But in Feinberg?s world, it made no difference whether a person could still live a rewarding life or never left the race?s finish line. That didn?t enter the equation?his equation. His choice. His rules. Whether you died at the scene or you lost both your legs, you received the same amount of money?$2.2 million?from the victim fund established in the wake of the attack. If you lost one limb, you received considerably less. If you were hospitalized but kept your limbs, then still less.

Feinberg is the nearly ubiquitous expert who has been called in to divvy up funds for the fallen and the injured in a stomach-churning sequence of tragedies, from the Sept. 11 attacks to the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, from the Virginia Tech shootings to the Boston bombings. He?s Death?s accountant. When the stands collapsed at the Indiana State Fair in 2011, killing seven, they called Ken Feinberg. When a gunman murdered 27 children at Sandy Hook Elementary in Connecticut, they called Ken Feinberg. His is the grimmest of specialties.

?You?ll never make these people whole,? Feinberg says, sitting in his Washington law office as the city below baked in the summer?s heat. Befitting a career lived under klieg lights, one wall is dedicated to press clippings. But here, dread and devastation run though the framed articles, a sorrowful wall of fame. On the coffee table are we-couldn?t-have-done-it-without-you letters from Presidents Bush and Obama, along with a picture of Feinberg and family in the Oval Office. Opera, Feinberg?s passion, is piped into the room continuously.

And characteristic of a man who has waded repeatedly into tragedy?s wake, who has been praised and flayed, who has sent millions of dollars to some victims and told thousands of others they?ll see nothing, and who is viewed as the unparalleled expert in his field, Feinberg is alternately boastful and defensive, contemplative and bombastic. He?s done this so long now, he knows the questions before they come, addresses the criticisms before they?re raised, and stands by his record to the end. With this vocation, it seems, comes a nearly bottomless capacity for self-examination. Feinberg has written books and delivered commencement speeches on the principles of victim compensation, on the value of a life. He has a singular perspective on how our society chooses?or declines?to take care of its own. And it has left him troubled. ?Bad things happen to good people each day in this country,? he says.

That is to say, not everyone gets a million dollars when tragedy calls. And by ?not everyone,? that is to say just about no one. Feinberg?s entire public career is about the outliers?the handful of moments when the government, or a corporation, or a bevy of private citizens determines that a tragic event somehow merited a pecuniary response. Until 9/11, the government was not in the business of remunerating victims of terrorism; the closest it came to compensating on a mass scale was natural-disaster relief. But families of those murdered on that September day ended up with more than $2 million each, tax free. Feinberg says such an effort, funded by taxpayer dollars, will never happen again. ?It?s against our heritage and character as a nation, frankly, to be establishing government funds to compensate for loss,? he says.

Indeed, victims of the first World Trade Center bombings in 1993 never saw any money, nor did the 168 killed and 680 injured in the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing. Nor did the 13 troops killed and 30 wounded by a gunman at Fort Hood, Texas, in 2009. The Boston Marathon bombing, which killed three and injured more than 260 others, can be viewed as a test of whether Congress still wants to redress personal injuries caused by a terrorist attack. It doesn?t.

But if the government is out, everyday donors aren?t. The $60 million that Feinberg administered in Boston was all private money, which gave him license to disperse it any way he saw fit. Funds sprung up to assist victims of the shootings at Virginia Tech, Aurora, Colo., and Newtown, Conn. Obama persuaded BP to set aside $20 billion for businesses and communities harmed by the oil spill after its Deepwater Horizon rig exploded in 2010. Feinberg was involved in each of those efforts.

All of this raises fundamental questions of fairness, he says. On one hand, the 9/11 payout was an expression of political sentiment; few Americans objected. And as far as private money goes, well, that?s the marketplace in action. Donors are free to send checks in one case and not another, just like they?re free to choose between the Jerry Lewis telethon and the March of Dimes. On the other hand is the unsettling feeling that human life ends up being valued in all manner of disparate ways, based on publicity, geography, the nature of the crime, and the identities of the victims. ?It?s horrible,? Feinberg says. A woman who lost a spouse in the Boston bombings will receive more than $2 million. A family who lost a child at Sandy Hook Elementary will see less than $300,000. Meanwhile, the families of African-American children killed by stray bullets on the streets of Chicago, Washington, New Orleans, and elsewhere may not be able to cover the cost of the funeral.

SOME, NOT OTHERS

There are many reasons why the private victim fund has become the favored means to compensate victims of mass tragedy. Certainly, the 9/11 fund created a model in the public consciousness; it reemphasized the principle of a society collectively responding to disaster?and, more than that, it showed, largely thanks to Feinberg?s work, that compensation could be paid in a humane, effective, and efficient way. Other factors also play in: Technology has made donating easier than ever, while cable networks? thirst for narrative can drive donations. Victims in some cases are elevated to the status of martyrs or even angels. Tragedies are lingered over for days at a time. In some ways, it can feel like a telethon. ?You?re totally at the mercy of what people have an emotional reaction to, what gets the most visibility, what plays out well as a story,? says Edward Lascher, a social-sciences professor at California State University (Sacramento) who has written about victim funds. ?The potential for arbitrariness is pretty high.?

By and large, however, Americans have never made compensating victims of crime or tragedy a societal priority. It was, rather, a matter for criminal law, which provides for restitution in most cases. A perpetrator in an assault case, for example, is ordered to pay the victim?s medical expenses and lost wages as part of his punishment. The aim is to stave off another lawsuit to recover damages. ?You don?t want the victim to have to navigate the civil system,? says Meg Garvin, executive director of the National Crime Victim Law Institute in Portland, Ore.?a goal that Feinberg has long shared. Except that, often, the perp pays nothing; and when he does, it only trickles out. Convicted swindler Bernie Madoff was ordered to pay $17 billion to his victims, but he was bankrupted by the same crash that evaporated his clients? money. Some are just beginning to see partial payments.

A victims-rights movement that sprung out of the progressive criminal-justice reforms of the 1960s and ?70s led to state and federal programs intended to assist crime victims in the same manner as restitution, with basic payments to cover economic losses. But they are chronically underfunded (they draw money from fees and fines rather than from tax dollars) and often underused. They pay nothing on the order of the Boston fund or even the Newtown fund, because most states cap victim awards at $25,000. According to the National Association of Crime Victim Compensation Boards, less than $500 million is paid out annually to about 200,000 crime victims nationwide, an average of close to $2,500?almost 100 times less than the average Boston Marathon award.

In 2004, after Feinberg wrapped up the 9/11 fund, Julie Goldscheid, a professor at the City University of New York School of Law, compared the compensation given to three groups?terrorism victims, the more than 1,000 women killed that year as a result of domestic violence, and the 40,000 to 60,000 women who were sexually assaulted. The average 9/11 fund award, she noted, was $2 million, with payments ranging from $500 to $8.6 million. In 2001, the average award to crime victims through state victim-compensation programs was $2,400. ?The contrast was just stark,? Goldscheid says, calling it part of an ?unfortunate history of a narrative about deserving and undeserving victims.?

Private fundraising for certain classes of victims, she says, ?opens the door to long-standing biases.? Nowhere might this be more true than in Chicago. At the time of the Newtown tragedy last December, 270 children under 18 had been gunned down on Chicago?s streets during the previous three years. One was 7-year-old Heaven Sutton, who was hit by a stray bullet while selling candy outdoors a few months before Newtown. Her family asked for donations to cover the cost of the burial and even setting up a table at her memorial service. ?If you think about a victim of gang violence, they do tend to be kids of color,? Goldscheid says. ?Is there a sensibility that they are somehow at fault?? According to the Illinois attorney general?s office, the maximum a murder victim or the family can receive from the state compensation fund is $27,000. (Litigating en masse against the gun industry is no longer a realistic option since Congress passed a law in 2005 granting broad immunity to firearms manufacturers.)

Lascher says a valid argument can be made for treating terrorism victims differently than everyone else because of the ?psychic damage.? ?The community really does suffer from some instances more than others,? he says. He adds, however, that it?s tough to draw a line between the Boston bombings and the Sandy Hook shooting. ?If you are ever going to make a case for third-party trauma, it?s probably Newtown.?

But Newtown is also an example of the problematic nature of private victim funds, which can become politicized. Connecticut Gov. Dannel Malloy last month criticized the administrator of the fund, a foundation, for dispersing only $7.7 million of the $11.4 million to the families. It will use the rest to assist the Newtown community in unspecified ways. That means each family who lost a child will receive only $281,000 from the fund. ?I was amazed,? says Feinberg, shaking his head. He was a consultant to the fund but not its administrator.

LESSONS FROM MISERY

I first met Ken Feinberg 11 years ago at a claims hearings for the 9/11 fund. It was for Juan Cruz-Santiago, a Pentagon accountant who had somehow survived when American Airlines Flight 77 smashed into the building?s outer ring, where he was working. The inferno burned over 70 percent of Cruz-Santiago?s body and seared off his eyelids. He endured 30 surgeries and spent 12 weeks in the hospital, where doctors amputated his fingers.

Cruz-Santiago came with an attorney to ask Feinberg for an award akin to or greater than that given to a victim who had died in the attacks. Even then, Feinberg exhibited the mix of warmth and implacability that defines him, on one hand sympathizing with the victim?s suffering and on the other rejecting outright his lawyer?s efforts to inflate the award toward $3 million. Feinberg has written that he takes inspiration from the seated pose of Abraham Lincoln at the memorial on the National Mall. One hand is relaxed, showing his compassion toward the disloyal South; the other hand is clinched with determination to keep the Union together.

Feinberg works hard not to be swayed by emotional appeals?and he tries as best he can to keep some distance. ?You sob in private,? he says. ?Never in front of a victim.? As a rule, he does not visit the sites of the tragedies to which he has been connected. He avoided the marathon finish line and the Sandy Hook campus. He didn?t inspect Ground Zero in Manhattan until after the claims process was finished, and he never returned. Nor does he make a habit of visiting claimants in the hospital; he makes them come to an office, to keep himself from becoming entangled in their despair.

He broke his rule in Boston when he visited two victims at a rehabilitation facility?and he regrets it now. The first man, he says, greeted Feinberg with bitterness: ?You?re going to give me a million dollars or more,? he said. ?I?ve got a better idea. Give me my leg back.? The second victim?s legs were stippled by shrapnel and gangrene, but he still had them. He had been lying in bed doing the math, and he had a simple question for Feinberg. Should he have his legs amputated before the July 1 deadline for determining his award? The difference in his payout would have been more than $1 million, tax free. Feinberg didn?t know what to say. The man decided to keep his legs?and received $948,300. The first man, who lost one leg, received $1,195,000. Feinberg walked out of the facility that day and vowed: Never again. ?There have to be limits,? he says.

The Bush administration tapped Feinberg for the 9/11 assignment largely because of his work assessing claims that arose from the 1984 Agent Orange settlement, which was then the largest mass tort deal in U.S. history. Brokered by legendary federal Judge Jack Weinstein, a mentor of Feinberg?s, the settlement fund paid $197 million to about 52,000 veterans exposed to the toxin during the Vietnam War, and to their families. The top payment was $12,800.

But the 9/11 fund was unlike any previous settlement. Passed by Congress almost as an afterthought in the rush to ensure that the domestic airline industry didn?t collapse in the wake of the attacks, the statute handed Feinberg a blank check and a fair amount of discretion?although nothing like he enjoys when he administers private money. ?Congress didn?t know what a life was worth,? Feinberg says. ?So it said, ?Well, Ken will take care of it.? ? After Feinberg accepted the job, another mentor, Sen. Edward Kennedy, for whom he had served as chief of staff, gave him some advice. ?You make sure that 10 percent of the people don?t get 90 percent of the taxpayers? money,? Kennedy said. ?Be careful.?

Out of his 9/11 experience, which had its share of rocky moments, Feinberg developed a set of principles he?s used ever since: Be fair. Be up-front about the process. Give victims and their families a chance to vent. Try to evaluate applications with a minimum of paperwork. Don?t get bogged down assessing each claim like an insurance company or a court would. Don?t try to figure out someone?s future earnings. Or how long they?re going to live. Or the extent that one victim is more injured than another. ?If I took time to examine everybody?s medical records, how can I get money out the door?? he says of his Boston work. ?I?d be swamped. It would be New Year?s before the money would get out.?

To Feinberg, who takes jobs like the Boston fund pro bono, that?s the most basic tenet of all: Victims, he says, don?t believe a compensation process will work until the checks move. ?Nothing is more important than getting money out the door,? he says. The Boston attack took place on April 15. In May, Feinberg stood before a crowd at the Boston Public Library and explained the uncomplicated criteria he would use for distributing money: Death and double amputation, single amputation, hospital stay, outpatient care. That was it, and that was the hierarchy. A month later, he held claims hearings. The first checks went out within 60 days of the bombing.

There were a few hiccups: One man sought $2 million for an aunt who had been dead for a decade. Another woman faked the documentation of a traumatic brain injury, won a $484,000 award, and was then caught and arrested. But only one victim, Feinberg says, wrote him to complain about his award, a man who lost an arm. He said that $1 million simply wasn?t going to cut it. Feinberg had long ago decided not to distinguish between a lost arm and a lost leg. And not to give a wealthy victim any less than the one who makes $68,000 per year and has to support five kids. ?Most tort lawyers would say, ?Ken, don?t you dare give both of those victims the same amount.? I disagree,? he says. ?I?m not prepared to say to someone they don?t need a million dollars.?

Plenty of people didn?t see a dime. Feinberg immediately ruled out compensation for mental distress?nothing for those who witnessed the explosions or who were showered with the blood of victims; nothing for the first responders who had to treat the shattered bodies. ?Start paying everyone who has mental trauma?? he asks. ?I got trauma watching on CNN.? Property damage, no. Economic losses, no. Forget that Boylston Street was shut down for the investigation and cleanup. Forget about the city being on lockdown while the Tsarnaevs were pursued.

Boston was as simple as anything like this was going to be. Money was plentiful, and Feinberg had grown up in nearby Brockton. (His accent makes it sound like he never left.) Still, the carnage, the amputated arms and legs, will linger with him. ?This was the worst experience I?ve had,? he says. ?In 9/11, you either got out of the buildings or you didn?t.?

EXCEPTIONS, NOT RULES

I tell Feinberg that I can?t help but think of the waves of young soldiers who?ve returned from Iraq and Afghanistan with missing limbs. He nods. ?They didn?t get a million dollars.? And they can?t. (Disability benefits for military amputees top out at around $7,800 per month.) We place soldiers in a different category than innocent victims, because they signed up to put their lives on the line. They undertook?and are paid for?the risk.

But what if the risk they assumed doesn?t cover being gunned down away from the battlefield, within the confines of their own military base? On Nov. 5, 2009, Maj. Nidal Hasan, an Army psychiatrist, opened fire with a semiautomatic pistol at Ford Hood, killing 13 and wounding 32 more before he was subdued. He now faces court-martial on murder charges.

Since the attack, the Obama administration has been locked in a debate with the victims over whether Hasan, a Muslim radicalized by a Qaida cleric while America was at war, committed an act of terrorism. The White House and the Defense Department call it ?workplace violence,? since Hasan is not technically considered an enemy, despite arguments to the contrary from members of the Texas congressional delegation and other politicians. In a statement to Fox News last week, Hasan said the U.S. is ?at war? with Islam.

The victims? families and the survivors of the attack have taken the unusual step of suing the federal government for damages, alleging that the administration?s failure to label the attack as terrorism has resulted in reduced levels of financial and medical benefits because their injuries have been deemed unrelated to combat; they also charge that the FBI and the Pentagon failed to identify Hasan as a threat. The government has asked the court to delay the suit until after Hasan?s trial.

Kimberly Munley, a civilian police sergeant who was wounded when she tried to stop Hasan and who was seated next to Michelle Obama at the 2010 State of the Union, told ABC earlier this year that the president had broken his promise to help the shooting victims. ?We got tired of being neglected,? she said of the lawsuit. Munley?s lawyer, Reed Rubinstein, wonders why the government was so quick to compensate the Pentagon victims of the 9/11 attacks and hasn?t showed the same generosity with the Fort Hood victims. ?From a public standpoint,? he says, ?people assumed the government was going to take care of its own.? Rubinstein, who practices in Washington, says his plaintiffs have noticed the millions, too, that poured into the Boston Marathon fund. What, after all, is the difference between that terrorist attack and this one?

The lawsuit faces serious and perhaps insurmountable obstacles in court; the government is likely immune. But Rubinstein could find encouragement in a June ruling by the British Supreme Court, which held that families of British soldiers killed in Iraq could sue the U.K. government for negligence if the soldiers received improper equipment and training. The ruling has no applicability to U.S. troops, but it could represent a trend toward holding the military accountable for negligence in ways courts haven?t before.

In the meantime, Rubinstein, mindful of the long road ahead, has been considering other ways to help his clients. ?I?ve been thinking about starting up a nonprofit fund,? he says.

BUILDING A MODEL

Feinberg has always worried that the 9/11 fund set a bad precedent. ?If Congress had thought about it a couple of more weeks, they probably wouldn?t have passed it,? he says. He frets about creating a culture of victim entitlement, which is why he thinks nothing like the fund will ever exist again.

Others aren?t so sure. Lascher, the Cal State professor, says government may have to step in if there?s another large-scale terrorist attack. ?We really do recognize that people suffer disproportionately, and we have an obligation to take care of them,? he says.

But another part of Feinberg?s legacy, his work on the BP oil spill, may last the longest. In a sense, what the company did was more radical than Congress?s creation of the 9/11 fund?deciding to set aside $20 billion to avoid protracted litigation. Nothing, not even 9/11, created more headaches for Feinberg than the spill. Claimants all along the Gulf Coast grumbled that he was moving too slowly. Local politicians griped about his methodology. Trial lawyers felt aced out of the action after victims waived their right to sue. And it didn?t entirely work: BP remains locked in a lawsuit against other claimants in New Orleans.

The BP fund put Feinberg in an odd position. He has maintained throughout his career (and in his private work settling claims for corporations) that there are better alternatives to a trial. He rankled some in the plaintiffs? bar when he explained to claimants why they should waive their right to sue: They got their money from the fund quickly, and no lawyer would take a cut. But he also resisted attempts by pro-business forces such as the U.S. Chamber of Commerce to hold up his efforts as an example of a reshaped American legal system. ?I?m a lawyer,? Feinberg said in a speech to the chamber three years ago. ?I happen to believe, in the run-of-the-mill, everyday life in America, the legal system works pretty well.?

At the same time, he recognizes that the environment for litigation?and particularly mass class-action suits?has worsened dramatically since his Agent Orange days, because of hostility from the courts, Congress, and state legislatures. Cases must more often be heard individually (if at all), which can clog court dockets. As an alternative, in situations where liability seems clear, ?one has to look toward some sort of an informal process? other than litigation, says Robert Rabin, a professor at Stanford Law School. ?The tort system was never superefficient. The question is whether the tort system is still the way to go? when 90 percent of all cases end up settling. It?s something that airlines?which can be quick to settle claims after a crash?have known for years. Hospitals, too, are realizing that admitting to medical error, engaging the patient quickly, and disbursing money results in far fewer malpractice suits. That?s the Feinberg Way.

Feinberg has seen it himself, beyond BP, which he calls a tremendous success story, because the vast majority of claimants avoided the courts. The Virginia Tech shootings served as another model. Because that fund was private, the 200-plus applicants didn?t have to surrender the right to sue the university. Still, only two did. Feinberg credits the lessons he learned from the 9/11 fund: Treat people well, give them some money, and they don?t sue. To that end, Penn State University brought him in last year to quickly (and quietly) settle claims relating to the Jerry Sandusky sexual-abuse scandal, where, again, liability isn?t the issue. Even the 9/11 fund has been revived in an effort to ward off litigation from first responders who say they suffered health problems from exposure at Ground Zero. Now they can apply to the fund for compensation, though the job will be tougher because the amount of money that can be awarded is capped. Feinberg had unlimited government funds the first time around. (He isn?t involved this time.)

But there?s the legacy, and there?s the man himself. And the need for his special expertise shows no signs of abating. After my second interview with Feinberg, he went to Capitol Hill to give advice about how to distribute money collected after 19 firefighters were killed battling Arizona wildfires. (What would he tell lawmakers? ?Take the money. Divide it by 19. And get it out.?) Life, Feinberg says, guarantees misfortune. The wolf is always at the door.

The work has taken a toll. When it gets bad, Feinberg retreats to a soundproof room in his home and cranks up Wagner or Verdi. It?s been his curative since he was a child. ?Shut that door, and you escape.? Opera, he says, is the height of civilization, but ?civilization is no guarantee against these horrors that we go through. Just because we live in a civilized society doesn?t mean we aren?t going to have these tragedies.?

You can stop whenever you want, I tell him. The next time a president, or a governor, or a mayor calls, you can turn it down. ?No one would blame you if you said, ?I?ve had enough tragedy for 20 lifetimes,? ? I say.

?I?m not going to say no,? Feinberg replies. ?I?m not going to say no.? And, to be sure, that call will come. It always does.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/much-life-worth-220007395.html

battle royale key largo ryan madson louisiana primary syracuse basketball chipper jones chipper jones

Friday, August 2, 2013

Twitter search upgraded with photo results, recent query suggestions

Twitter search upgraded with photo results, recent query suggestions

In case you haven't noticed, text-based search results simply don't cut it anymore -- users are looking for people, pictures and social context. Naturally, Twitter is keeping up with the times, updating its own search bar with socially aware suggestions, previous search data and more robust results. The general search experience hasn't changed, of course, but the changes do tweak the experience for the better.

Suggested accounts, for instance, are now underlined by users you know that follow them, and simply leaving your cursor in the search field offers a preview of recent and saved searches. Results have more meat too, offering tabs for matching users and photos, as well as displaying them within the standard results stream. A revolution in social search algorithms? Probably not, but it should make it a little easier for you to keep up with the latest celebrity gossip.

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/08/01/twitter-search-upgraded-with-photo-results/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

2012 nfl schedule dishonored april 18 delonte west vanessa williams nicklas backstrom discovery shuttle

How to customize safe search filtering results in YouTube for iOS

How to customize safe search filtering results in YouTube for iOS

If you use the YouTube app to browse and watch videos, you may not be aware that by default YouTube may be filtering out certain search results based on what filter settings you have set up under your YouTube account.

You can easily change them straight from your iPhone and iPad. It's a good thing to know how to do especially if you have younger children you don't want coming across explicit content by mistake. Here's how:

  1. Launch the YouTube app from the Home screen of your iPhone or iPad.
  2. Tap on the menu button in the upper left hand corner.
  3. Now tap on Settings from the menu under your user profile information. You don't have to be signed in to change search filtering options but if you are, that's okay too.
  4. Here you'll see a list of things you can adjust on your YouTube account. Tap on Safe Search Filtering.
  5. Here you can switch between strict, moderate, and no filtering. Make your selection by tapping on it and then tap the Done button in the upper right hand corner.

That's all there is to it. The YouTube app will now abide by the search filtering settings you've chosen until you decide to change them again.

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/U4hZkqeE-0g/story01.htm

60 minutes go daddy Tom Kenny Long Island Medium Alfonso Ribeiro College Football Scoreboard nfl scores

From NBA Summer League To The Drew League, D-League Alum Zach Andrews Is Simply Doing Work This Summer

From NBA Summer League to the Drew League, athletic big man Zach Andrews has tailored his summer schedule to showcase his talents in front of the most influential of personnel. The former NBA D-League standout has an unwavering desire to play in the Association, but will his fire and determination ultimately land him back in the NBA?

The fire that burns inside of Zach Andrews, can be found in a multitude of hungry basketball talents across the country. However, the flame which Andrews draws upon for his daily motivation, and drive, is likely the brightest out of the plethora of summer basketball hopefuls.

For some, basketball becomes an obsession derived from a passion which refuses to extinguish. When talking with players who exhibit this sentiment, it's quite easy to pick up on this type of mindset, and if you have the opportunity spend a few minutes with Andrews, it's quite clear the high-energy, low block specialist is fueled by a similar endless passion.

With plenty of playing opportunities during the summer months, hoop junkies like Andrews can demonstrate their willingness to grind, by taking part in the many different leagues. In a rare moment of downtime, RidiculousUpside.com caught up with Andrews, as he prepares to play in the Drew League for the second time in his career.

"We are all hungry, and we all want to make it"

Andrews was apart of an impressive NBA D-League Select squad at Summer League, which was perhaps the last time scouts and NBA personnel had a chance to watch the six-foot-nine-inch rebounding specialist. "Vegas was amazing, we had a great group of guys and it showed that there is a lot of talent in the D-League. We are all hungry, and we all want to make it, so we combined our talents and that helped us win games." Andrews said.

Andrews, who has developed a nice relationship with the Los Angeles Lakers and their NBADL affiliate the L.A. D-Fenders, parlayed another stint with the D-Fenders into a spot on the NBADL Select team in Vegas. In his 76 games with the D-Fenders, Andrews has averaged 8.3 points and 6.7 rebounds in 24.5 minutes. His career averages won't immediately grab your attention, but watching Andrews in action will tell you everything that you need to know about his game.

"My specialty is rebounding, and being a garbage man of sorts. I see myself as a player similar to Dennis Rodman, or Chris "Birdman" Anderson." Andrews explained. The former Bradley product can certainly add value to a team needing help around the low post area, and in the rebounding department. In fact, Andrews had a few highlights displaying his ability to clean up around the rim at NBA Summer League.

Now, Andrews is focused on playing in the popular Drew League. According to Andrews, "I haven't played any games yet, but I will be getting down there soon. The Drew League is a great way to keep your game sharp, and you never know what's going to happen, or who's possibly watching, that's the exciting part."

After playing in the Drew League, Andrews plans to play in the San Francisco Bay Area Pro-Am Basketball League, which according to Andrews, is also filled with highly-skilled players. Keeping track of Andrews' summer whereabouts can make one tired, and obviously he is doing everything in his power to gain recognition in order for him to earn a shot with an NBA team.

Just recently, NBA D-League alumni from a season ago, have either signed, or have been rumored to be signing deals overseas. DaJuan Summers, Luke Harangody, Tony Taylor, and Coby Karl, which can arguably be described as players in a similar position as Andrews, have been linked to deals overseas. Yet, it has also been reported that Marcus Landry, another NBADL alum, is thought to be signing a deal with the Los Angeles Lakers for what will likely be a training camp spot. It is a tricky waiting game that players are forced to endure this time of year.

For now, Andrews has his sights set on landing with an NBA team for training camp and the preseason. If the opportunity doesn't present itself, than Andrews told RidiculousUpside.com that he will go back overseas. Either way, Andrews is making sure that he is putting in the proper amount of work to achieve his ultimate goal, and surely teams will take notice of his dizzying summer quest for recognition.

Source: http://www.ridiculousupside.com/2013/8/1/4577210/from-nba-summer-league-to-the-drew-league-d-league-alum-zach-andrews

Daily Show provisional ballot rush limbaugh rush limbaugh karl rove Election 2012 Results polling place

Cycling-Uran and Renshaw join Omega Pharma-Quick Step

Aug 1 (Reuters) - Olympic silver medallist Rigoberto Uran has left Team Sky to join Omega Pharma-Quick Step, the Belgian team said on Thursday.

The 26-year-old Colombian, who finished second in the road race at last year's London Games, was also runner-up in this year's Giro D'Italia after taking over the team leader's role from Bradley Wiggins.

"Rigoberto's arrival reinforces our team as far as the major tours are concerned," team manager Patrick Lefevere said in a statement. "Uran is a top rider and his talent on climbs goes without saying."

Omega Pharma-Quick Step have also recruited Australian leadout man Mark Renshaw in order to reunite him with his former team mate and sprinter Mark Cavendish.

The pair forged a formidable partnership when they raced together for three years at HTC-Highroad between 2009 and 2011 before going their separate ways when the team disbanded. (Reporting by Toby Davis; Editing by John Mehaffey)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/cycling-uran-renshaw-join-omega-pharma-quick-step-135804208.html

8 bit google maps kids choice awards 2012 micah true blood diamond kansas vs ohio state winning mega million numbers bruce weber

Thursday, August 1, 2013

Google's Sordid History of Net Neutrality Hypocrisy

Google's Sordid History of Net Neutrality Hypocrisy

Google is a company that's long stood up for the principles of net neutrality, the idea that all packets of information on the internet should be treated equally. But now that it's an internet service provider, the company's changing its tune. It's not the first time.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/H_vP3Yqn7nY/googles-sordid-history-of-net-neutrality-hypocrisy-977444255

catherine zeta jones charlize theron barbra streisand barbra streisand hugh jackman Aly Raisman Oscar Results

NBA star Steve Nash got to have a tryout with Inter Milan in New York

Wednesday, July 31st, 2013

1451329steve nash780x390 NBA star Steve Nash got to have a tryout with Inter Milan in New YorkNBA star Steve Nash is arguably the most high profile Football (Soccer) fan in America and his passion for the game is well known.

Nash is one of the main owners of the Vancouver Whitecaps in the MLS and constantly talks of his love for Premier League side Tottenham.

However in the past few days Nash got an amazing opportunity to have a tryout?alongside Inter Milan as the?Nerazzurri prepared for their summer tour of America.

Canadian?Nash looked like a little kid in a sweet shop as he appear almost overawed by the opportunity to play with Inter Milan?s stars.

Watch clips from Steve Nash?s tryout below, along with an interview with?Steve Nash on the Dan Patrick Show discussing what American soccer would be like if some of the NBA?s best players were brought up on the world?s most popular sport.

Source: http://www.101greatgoals.com/blog/nba-star-steve-nash-got-to-have-a-tryout-with-inter-milan-in-new-york/

Stephanie Rice Meet the Pyro Karen Klein Colorado fires Summer Solstice 2012 Waldo Canyon fire K Michelle