Growing like gangbusters, Turkey says Western economies need ‘serious reforms’

May 14th, 2012

Turkey’s Deputy Prime Minister Ali Babacan warned Friday that the US and Europe were not doing enough to resolve the core causes of the global economic slowdown.

The global economy remains deep in crisis and Europe and the United States are doing little to resolve its core causes, Deputy Turkish Prime Minister Ali Babacan warned Friday.

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Mr. Babacan, a former foreign minister and Turkey?s point-man for economic policy, said neither the US nor the eurozone countries have yet to deal with the underlying causes of the global economic slowdown: a weak financial sector, weak corporate balance sheets, risky public financial positions.?

Speaking at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University, Babacan warned that this year will be a year of reckoning for the European Union, and he pointed to the recent collapse of the Dutch government over the budget austerity measures as a harbinger for Europe?s coming fiscal battles.?

?2012 will be test year for European countries,? he said. ?2013 will be test year for American economy. After the elections [the new administration] will find very difficult decisions on the table right away. There has to be serious fiscal adjustment and a medium term plan to deal with the deficit. So far, there is no credible plan to deal with deficit.?

Babacan said developed countries need to undertake serious structural changes including reforming social security and labor markets: ?It is absolutely necessary for serious reforms, especially in many European countries, absolutely necessary and urgent.?

Babacan is a founding member of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan?s Justice and Development Party and considered a leading member of the ?Neo-Ottomanism? movement, moving Turkey?s foreign policy away from a predominantly Western focus to integration and activism in its immediate neighborhood ??the territories of the former Ottoman Empire.

Babacan contrasted the Western economic turmoil, with Turkey?s booming economy which he said grew at 9.2 percent growth rate in 2010, and 8.5 percent in 2011.

?We entered this crisis with a strong banking system and strong public financial structure. During the crisis when many countries were asking for fiscal stimulus programs.? We followed a very different route. We did just the opposite. We announced fiscal consolidation program. And we overperformed,? he said.

He said Turkey?s economy was far more open than many European countries, which had made Turkish companies more dynamic and more competitive in global markets. And he argued that Turkish growth was more sustainable because he said it didn?t come on the back of government spending, but rather private sector growth.

In the coming years, he said, ?We will have lower growth ??though better than everywhere else in Europe ??but slower than before. Growth is high, but it?s also sustainable growth.?

?Tight fiscal policies will continue, in good days or in bad days,? he said, ?but we don?t believe in economic growth through public spending.?

Islam, democracy, and capitalism

Turkey has shown how Islam and democracy and capitalism can cooexist peacefully, Babacan said.?

?When people observe a functioning example, people are more encouraged to ask for more in their own countries,? he said. ?We have been talking with leaders: Change is coming, you can no longer have a closed regime with an open society ??satellites, social media, the Internet ??you have this kind, this kind of society moving forward and you are running this closed regime, this is not sustainable, this cannot continue.?

?We have advised these leaders to lead this change, or you will be pushed by change anyway,? he said. ?

Babacan addressed several of the long-running disputes in the region, such as the Israeli-Palestinian impasse, the status of the split island of Cyprus, and the violence in neighboring Syria. He said Turkey was strongly supportive of the six-point peace plan pushed by former United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan, but he said Turkey was strongly against any sort of military intervention or sending weapons to the embattled Syrian opposition forces.

He also said the Syrian opposition is coalescing into a viable alternative to the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

?We need to see visible, verifiable, and indisputable change in the country,? he said. ?The primary responsibility to end the violence will rest with the Syrian regime.?

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scrambls

May 14th, 2012

Facebook includes an option to limit readership of your posts to specific groups, but you have to remember to use it. Other social media sites may not offer similar protection. A scrambls (free) membership lets you take total control of who can read any post. It isn’t military-grade encryption, but it works well for simple privacy, as long as all of your friends install it too.

To start using scrambls, you sign up for a free account and download the appropriate browser plug-in. The service currently offers plug-ins for Firefox, Chrome, Safari, and Fennec (Firefox’s mobile browser for Android). There’s no plug-in for Internet Explorer as yet, but the company is working on it.

The company specifically advertises that scrambls works with Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Google+, and Yammer, but it really should work for any social media site. If you discover a site where scrambls doesn’t work, the company wants to know about it.

You type your post as usual, but when you send it scrambls replaces the text with a social-media-friendly encrypted version. If you’re logged in to scrambls you’ll still see the plain-text post. If not, or if you’re not authorized to see the post, it looks like gibberish.

Defining Groups
Out of the box, scrambls defines two groups, Everyone and Only Me. A post scrambld for the Everyone group will be visible to any other scrambls user; a post set to Only Me can’t be viewed by anyone but you.

You’ll probably want to define your own groups to control access. Unfortunately you can’t import your friends list from Facebook. The simplest way to define a group is by using a list of email addresses. According to the scrambls site, “We will soon be adding support for other identifiers, such as a Facebook id, as well as the ability to assign multiple identifiers to one account.”

Scrambls offers a number of advanced methods for defining a group. You can include entire domains, for example, to keep certain posts accessible only within your company. You can also exclude specific domains or addresses.

One way to avoid entering an endless list of addresses is the shared secret technique. You define a shared secret (basically a passphrase) for the group. Any scrambls user who wants to view posts assigned to this group must enter the passphrase to see the plain text.

Group rules can also determine just when a post can be viewed. You can control the beginning and ending date for viewing of posts to a group, or set posts to become active and expire after a specified time. For business users, there’s an option to authenticate users via an external service; setting this up will require help from scrambls tech support.

Your initial choice of group for a post isn’t set in stone. At any time you can right-click a scrambld post and choose a different group. Setting a post to the Only Me group effectively hides it from everyone else.

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The Engadget interview: OnStar’s Nick Pudar talks smart grids at CTIA 2012 (video)

May 14th, 2012

The Engadget interview: OnStar's Nick Pudar talks smart grids at CTIA 2012 (video)

While visiting the Innovation Showcase at CTIA 2012, we ran into Nick Pudar — OnStar’s VP of Business Development — who was kind enough to give us a few minutes of his time. We sat in the LTE Skype-enabled Chevy Volt on display and discussed such topics as OnStar FMV, RelayRides and smart grids — wherein power utilities can (with the customer’s consent) send a signal to a vehicle to control when it charges. The idea is to allows utilities to maximize grid efficiency and minimize power spikes while giving customers options for when to charge the vehicle — like when the rates are the lowest or when the power generated is coming from renewable energy, for example. Pretty neat stuff, eh? Watch our video interview for all the (pardon the pun) juicy details.

The Engadget interview: OnStar’s Nick Pudar talks smart grids at CTIA 2012 (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 12 May 2012 10:07:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Their convention in Charlotte just months away, Democrats cope with political headaches in NC (Star Tribune)

May 13th, 2012
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ATD: Yahoo’s CEO Scott Thompson to step down amidst degree scandal

May 13th, 2012

scott thompson yahoo ceoWhile thousands upon thousands of Americans are celebrating graduation weekend with degree in hand, it looks as if the CEO of one particular internet company will be wondering why he lied about his. After weeks of investigating, word on the street has it that freshly appointed (as in January 4th) CEO Scott Thompson will be “stepping down.” In other words, he’s being canned. The news comes from an All Things D report on the matter, with the official word expected soon. The scandal took hold a few weeks back, with the official Yahoo bio listing a computer science degree that he allegedly didn’t even have. The company line is that he’s bolting for “personal reasons,” but seriously — what are the chances these “reasons” would’ve emerged sans scandal? It’s bruited that Yahoo’s global media head Ross Levinsohn will be filling Scott’s shoes for now, but there’s no word yet on who the firm’s next CEO will be. It’s a shame, but it sure feels like a revolving door in Yahoo’s corner office.

ATD: Yahoo’s CEO Scott Thompson to step down amidst degree scandal originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 13 May 2012 12:03:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Time Warner Cable brings ESPN, Fox and Turner sports live streaming to apps, website

April 21st, 2012

Time Warner Cable brings ESPN, Fox and Turner sports live streaming to PCs, tablets and phones

The newly-available-on-Android live streaming feature of Time Warner Cable’s TWC TV app (and TWCTV.com website) has just gotten a major content upgrade, adding many national and regional sports feeds. It looks like ESPN, ESPN2, TNT, TBS, MLB Network, NBA TV and NHL Network are available in most regions, along with the applicable Fox RSNs. The full lineup of areas and channels is in the press release after the break. Of course, if you’d like to keep telling your significant other sports channels haven’t been added yet and they will need to watch their reality show on the tablet while you use the big HDTV, then we can all just pretend this never happened.

Continue reading Time Warner Cable brings ESPN, Fox and Turner sports live streaming to apps, website

Time Warner Cable brings ESPN, Fox and Turner sports live streaming to apps, website originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 20 Apr 2012 15:43:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Shooting Challenge: Black & White [Shooting Challenge]

April 21st, 2012

Intel's first smartphone release date

Intel’s first Atom smartphone is now available, and it’s Lava’s Xolo X900. It has managed to outpace both Lenovo’s K800 and Orange’s Santa Clara, arriving on the Indian carrier next Monday. When we handled the Xolo X900 in Barcelona a few months ago, the 1.6 GHz Atom Z2460 processor seemed pleasantly responsive, although we were less enamoured with the phone’s middling build quality. The four-inch 1024 x 600 display is accompanied by a one-megapixel camera on the front, plus a primary 8-megapixel shooter on the back capable of burst-shot photography. Despite its plastic build, Intel’s new mobile offering won’t come all that cheap; the Xolo X900 by Lava is priced off-contract at around 22,000 INR ($420). At the moment, we’re still waiting to hear how Orange and Lenovo will price up their own Medfield-powered offerings — both are expected to emerge in the next few months.

Continue reading Intel’s first smartphone coming soon: Xolo X900 gets April 24 release date

Intel’s first smartphone coming soon: Xolo X900 gets April 24 release date originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 19 Apr 2012 06:29:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Building Smarter Apps

April 20th, 2012

iPhone App Store Icon WallA new breed of mobile applications is coming. These new apps will not only “sense” the world around you, using the smartphone’s sensors like the compass, GPS, and accelerometer – they’ll also be able to combine that data with a history of your actions to intelligently determine your likes, interests and favorites. This understanding of the world, or “ambient discovery” if you will, could then be piped into any app to make it smarter, whether it’s a social app for finding friends, a Siri-like personal assistant, a fitness app, a mobile game, or anything else. This, at least, is the promise from the Palo Alto-based startup, Alohar Mobile, which recently introduced new SDKs for mobile app developers interested in experimenting with the possibilities of smarter apps.

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New world record set for Rube Goldberg machine

April 19th, 2012

A team of students out of Purdue University recently recorded a flawless run of their 300-step Rube Goldberg machine, which was designed to inflate and pop a balloon.

Efficiency and simplicity are the major tenets of top-notch engineering. But is there anything to learn from the most laborious, inelegant solution to a problem?

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Evidently, yes. A cadre of undergrad and graduate students at Purdue University recently finished building a Rube Goldberg machine that sequences 300 steps in order to inflate and pop a balloon. The process includes a fruit juicer, an extended vacuum tube, an apple peeler, poolballs, a mailbox, a pendulum, a piggy bank, a saw, and an antique train whistle on loan from a local museum.?

Members of the Purdue Society of Professional Engineers and the Society of Hispanic Professional Engineers built and entered the circuitous machine into the 2012 Rube Goldberg Competition. They had a few hiccups during the competition itself ? twice requiring human intervention ? but still managed to nab second place.

The video records the team’s perfect run after the competition, which set a new world record for the number of steps. The old record was 244.

It’s hard to imagine a project so antithetical to Occam’s Razor, a law that urges the selection of the simplest of existing solutions, as that will introduce the fewest possibilities for error ? a principle that, among others, informs the modern practice of engineering. But criticizing it from this perspective would sorely miss the point of the Rube Goldberg machine, which presents itself as an extremely diverse educational tool. What other college projects require knowledge of kinematics, electricity, thermodynamics, rotational energy, and dynamic architecture? Besides, it’s also a refreshing infusion of humor into an otherwise sober practice.

Bonus: Ever wonder what that music is that usually accompanies Rube Goldberg machines in those old Warner Bros. cartoons? Wonder no more: The tune is “Powerhouse,” by the Raymond Scott Quintette, and you can listen to it here.

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