Saturday, December 31, 2011

Peru president says annoyed by Berenson trip to NY

(AP) ? Peru's president said Saturday that he is annoyed a judge granted a holiday trip to New York for a U.S. woman convicted of aiding guerrillas in the country.

President Ollanta Humala told RPP radio that there is no guarantee Lori Berenson will return to Peru by the court-ordered deadline of Jan. 11. He called the judge's decision "totally strange."

Berenson, who was arrested in 1995, had served 15 years in prison after her conviction of being an accomplice to terrorism. She was released on parole last year.

Berenson has acknowledged helping the Tupac Amaru rebel group rent a safe house where authorities seized a cache of weapons after a shootout with the rebels. She insists she didn't know guns were stored there and says she never joined the group.

"I can't help but show my annoyance, my disappointment at this situation, in which terrorists are being allowed to leave the country while still on parole," Humala said.

It was the first time the president publicly expressed an opinion about Berenson's departure from Peru on Dec. 19. He said it was odd the judge hadn't sought any guarantee from the U.S. Embassy that she would return.

U.S. Embassy officials could not be reached for comment on Saturday. Berenson's lawyer in Peru did not return a call seeking comment.

The 42-year-old Berenson traveled to New York City with her 2-year-old son, Salvador, after receiving a court's approval for the trip.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-12-31-LT-Peru-Lori-Berenson/id-530ad376922844cfb734aac612b699f8

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Friday, December 30, 2011

Video: NASA hopes to answer questions about the Moon



>>> finally tonight here on earth this weekend is all about new year's eve. but for a team of nasa scientists, the focus will be a quarter of a million miles away . they will be monitoring a pair of spacecraft orbiting the moon, hoping to answer some age-old questions in what's being described as the biggest moon mission since man first landed there more than 40 years ago. here's nbc's george lewis .

>> reporter: millions of years ago, earth may have had not one, but two moons. then, according to theory they collided -- an event known as the big splat. that would explain the irregularities on the present day moon. all the valleys on the side we see. all the mountains on the other side.

>> scientists have not had a good way to track that down yet. this is the going of solving that mystery.

>> zero, and liftoff of the delta ii , journey to the center of the moon.

>> reporter: in september, nasa launched two lunar probes aboard the same rocket. they'll chase each other in orbit around the moon to study it from surface to center. the mission will be run from this control room in paspasadena, california. a critical point comes this weekend when the two craft fire to get into orbit around the moon.

>> this is the big crunch time. this weekend is going to be the time when it comes together or falls apart .

>> that's one small step for man --

>> reporter: for nasa it will be the most intense focus on the moon since the days of the apollo program .

>> it's very challenging but we have done a lot of practicing and we're ready to do that.

>> reporter: former astronaut sally ride will organize thousands of middle school students to tell nasa what pictures the spacecraft should take with their on-board cameras.

>> hopefully it will encourage kids to get more involved in science and engineering.

>> reporter: so this weekend while millions are watching the new year's ball drop in times square , nasa scientists will be watching the other illuminated ball that holds so many mysteries. george lewis , nbc news, pasadena, california.

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/nightly-news/45819973/

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

In pursuit, GOP contenders rumble through Iowa (AP)

DES MOINES, Iowa ? Three Republican presidential candidates, each claiming to be the truly conservative alternative to Mitt Romney, are launching bus tours Tuesday through this early nominating state.

Just a week before Iowa's leadoff caucuses, Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann, Texas Gov. Rick Perry and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich prepared to rumble through small towns aboard their campaign buses. They're looking for supporters one at a time and hoping to become a roadblock for Romney, who is looking stronger than expected. Romney returns to Iowa on Tuesday after a quick stop in his long-established stronghold of New Hampshire.

Ahead of the Jan. 3 caucuses that officially begin the GOP's nominating calendar, the candidates were returning for a final rush of speeches, meet-and-greet stops and town hall-style meetings. And they are bracing for one last round of advertising, which most observers are expecting to be nasty.

Each campaign has also tried to gauge the level of enthusiasm for Rep. Ron Paul of Texas. The libertarian favorite has built a strong organization here and recent polls suggest he is peaking, a rise that has him tied with or even ahead of Romney ? and drawing more scrutiny for his views.

"There's really three primaries going on here," former Sen. Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania told reporters in Adel, where he went hunting for pheasant and quail. "There's the libertarian primary, which Ron Paul is going to win. Then you've got the moderate primary, which Gingrich and Romney are scrumming for. And you've got three folks who are running as strong conservatives."

He included himself, Bachmann and Perry in that conservative camp. Former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman signaled early on he would not compete in Iowa and instead plans to start his campaign in New Hampshire.

But with time ticking down in Iowa, several hopefuls are packing their days with rambling road trips to sparsely populated corners of the state. If history is a predictor, some of these candidates will be former candidates after the first contest.

Bachmann last week began her effort to visit each of the state's 99 counties, an ambitious pace that left her darting into diners and gas stations for quick visits. She was set to return to that pace early Tuesday in Council Bluffs, on the state's western edge. By nightfall, she was slated to have visited another 10 counties.

Perry was set to begin his tour in Council Bluffs several hours later. He planned just four stops during his day.

Gingrich was ready to return to the opposite side of the state, with three stops in Dubuque.

Paul was set to return Wednesday for a late push ahead of the New Year's holiday.

Many of those expected to participate in the caucuses remain undecided, and most of the contenders have seen their fortunes rise quickly and then deflate. Romney and Santorum have remained relatively steady: Romney solidly near the top and Santorum consistently struggling to build support.

Yet Santorum alone has achieved the accomplishment of visiting all 99 counties. With more than 350 campaign events behind him this year, he is hoping the early groundwork ? and a possible late surge ? help him beat expectations.

He was slated to start his day in Fort Dodge, in the deeply conservative far northwest corner of the state.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111227/ap_on_el_pr/us_gop_campaign

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

6 books you should resolve to read in 2012

It?s common practice, as the year draws to a close, to reflect on the past twelve months ? to think back on what you did, how you spent your time, and who you spent it with. My years, more than anything, are shaped by books so when I look back I?m thinking about what I read. The same goes for thinking about the year to come: When I make my New Year?s resolutions, it?s pretty much just a long list of books that I want to get my hands on. And so, in looking forward to 2012, here are some things that I?ve already gotten my hands on; it would be wise of you to do the same. If what I?m reading (and loving) is any indication, 2012 is going to be a strange and wonderful year.

- Rachel Meier, Monitor contributor

An enchanting (couldn?t resist) retelling of a classic Russian fairy tale, except this time it?s set in Alaska, circa 1920. Mabel and Jack are newcomers to Alaska and are being pulled apart by desolation and loneliness. Unable to conceive, the couple remains childless and the strain of maintaining their farm has pushed them to the edge of their capacity. In a rare moment of playfulness, the couple builds a child out of snow. Shortly thereafter, a child called Faina appears ? ethereal, bewitching, and mysterious. Ivey creates a world out of emptiness and populates it in completely unexpected ways.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/ozZyd0v4ueU/6-books-you-should-resolve-to-read-in-2012

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Swype gets a new beta, adopts Dragon Dictation for speech to text (video)

Swype Beta
Look, either you love or hate Swype -- there's just no two ways about it. Those that can't imagine life without the gesture-based virtual keyboard will probably only fall deeper in amour with it when greeted with the latest beta. Eagle-eyed observers might notice the microphone key in that image above has been replaced with a tiny flame logo that should be familiar to any fan of Nuance's voice-to-text apps. Swype now has Dragon Dictation baked right in -- a development we could have guessed was coming after the October buy out. Check out the epic video after the break for a few more details.

Continue reading Swype gets a new beta, adopts Dragon Dictation for speech to text (video)

Swype gets a new beta, adopts Dragon Dictation for speech to text (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 25 Dec 2011 12:55:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/Zxiw8n8oSCY/

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Gains in Colon Cancer Show a Racial Gap - NYTimes.com

Advances in screening, diagnosis and treatment of colon cancer mean fewer people are dying of the disease today than they were 20 years ago. But not everyone is benefiting equally.

Dr. John Kauh, an oncologist who works with colon cancer patients at Grady Memorial Hospital, a public hospital in Atlanta, knows that firsthand. Many of his poorer patients, often black, indigent and without insurance, show up when their disease has already advanced to the latest stages, when cure is least likely.

Even then, getting such patients into the operating room for surgery can take far longer than usual for ?various reasons,? said Dr. Kauh, who is also an associate professor of hematology and oncology at Emory University. ?Sometimes it?s a lack of insurance. Other times it?s a lack of social or family support, where the patients don?t have anyone to take them to their physician appointments or someone to take care of them postoperatively.?

That grim reality was highlighted in a new American Cancer Society report showing a wide gulf in progress among black and white colorectal cancer patients. The report, published in The Journal of Clinical Oncology, found that the mortality rate since the 1980s has fallen far more slowly for blacks than for whites.

?This shows that not all groups are benefiting from the advances that have been made,? said Dr. Anthony S. Robbins, an author of the study and director of health services research at the American Cancer Society. ?It?s a rising tide that raises some ships more than others.?

Early detection via colonoscopy and other screening tools is still the most important factor in colorectal cancer survival, since the disease is most treatable in its earliest stages, when disease is confined to the colon or rectum. And black patients, as a group, do not appear to be getting screened as regularly as white patients do.

As a result, ?blacks are more likely to have their cancers detected at a later stage,? Dr. Robbins said. ?And then no matter which stage it?s detected at, their survival is lower. This disparity in the stage at diagnosis is getting worse over time, and it?s driving these death rates apart.?

Even when colon cancer is caught early, racial disparities were evident, the report found. For those with a diagnosis of early-stage colorectal cancer, death rates fell 30 percent for whites and 13 percent for blacks in the last two decades.

The worse the stage of the disease at time of diagnosis, the greater the disparity in survival rates. For patients with more advanced cancer that had spread to surrounding tissue, white patients had a 48.5 percent drop in deaths, compared with a 34 percent drop among blacks. But by the time cancer had spread to a distant site, the chasm was even wider: a 32.6 percent drop in deaths for white patients and only a 4.6 percent drop ? almost no improvement at all ? among black patients.

?There was progress being made for both whites and blacks, but the progress was a whole lot more for whites,? said Dr. Robbins.

In an editorial that accompanied the new study, Electra D. Paskett, an expert on cancer disparities at Ohio State University, said the gap between white and black patients could be reduced through several steps, most importantly screening. Only 22 states have universal health insurance coverage for colorectal cancer screening, she noted. One of the earliest adopters, Massachusetts, has seen the disparities in colorectal cancer screening rates vanish among low-income blacks compared with other patients.

Dr. Paskett also pointed out that clinical trials for new cancer drugs are historically ?underused? by minority patients, in part because of a widespread myth in the health profession that blacks are less interested in enrolling than whites. To the contrary, Dr. Paskett found in her research that ?when eligible and asked to participate in a clinical trial, blacks were more likely to participate than whites.?

Another route Dr. Paskett proposed was the use of more ?patient navigators,? a sort of cancer-ward coach or concierge who acts as a guide for patients.

?Many hospitals,? she wrote, ?do not accept patients who cannot pay for care or who have public insurance, and those who do are overburdened with sick, needy patients. Patient navigators could be available both at the community level and the hospital level to promote easy access and navigation to proper care.?

Dr. Kauh of Atlanta added that he believed improved screening and other measures could make a difference, but only so much. ?To me a lot of this has to do with socioeconomic issues that can?t be quickly turned around,? he said. ?If you don?t have access to good health care, no matter how much education you provide patients, it?s going to be hard to make an overall difference in survival.?

Source: http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/12/27/colon-cancer-advances-show-black-white-divide/

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Olympus auditor handover shows no guideline violations: panel (Reuters)

TOKYO (Reuters) ? A panel reviewing auditing processes at scandal-hit Olympus Corp (7733.T) said on Tuesday it found no violation of accounting guidelines in the handoff to the Japanese arm of Ernst & Young (ERNY.UL) from the previous auditor in 2009.

The panel was established by Ernst & Young ShinNihon LLC to look into criticisms of the auditing process raised in a separate investigation commissioned by Olympus into its $1.7 billion accounting scandal.

The panel said, however, that further examination was needed on whether there were any problems in the handling of the takeover from KPMG AZSA LLC.

(Reporting by Nathan Layne; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/business/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111227/bs_nm/us_olympus_auditors

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Bieber, Aguilera & Hudson Rock Disney Parks Christmas Day Parade

Posted Sunday December 25, 2011 6:34 PM GMT

Making for an entertaining afternoon of holiday television, the 28th annual Disney Parks Christmas Day Parade offered up a star-studded lineup of performers during it's telecast on Sunday (December 25).

Hosted by Nick Cannon, the pre-taped Disney extravaganza welcomed teen sensation Justin Bieber to the Magic Kingdom park stage in Lake Buena Vista for renditions of his festive tunes "Mistletoe" and "Santa Claus is Coming to Town".

Also showing off her talents in the Lake Buena Vista locale was "American Idol" alum Jennifer Hudson, as the 30-year-old was backed up by a full choral group during a medley of holiday hits.

On the other coast of the States, Christina Aguilera joined alongside Minnie Mouse as she belted out ?Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas? to the delight of the Disney Grand Californian Hotel & Spa crowd lining the stage in Anaheim, CA.

With pictures from the tapings below, you can check out Justin, Christina and Jennifer's show-stopping performances in the video player above. Enjoy!

Enjoy the pictures from the 2011 Disney Parks Christmas Day Parade!

Source: http://celebrity-gossip.net/christmas-2011/bieber-aguilera-hudson-rock-disney-parks-christmas-day-parade-571602

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Monday, December 26, 2011

Identifying patients with suspected pancreatic cancer in primary care: derivation and validation of an algorithm

Buy & download fulltext article:

Abstract:

Background Pancreatic cancer has the worst survival for any cancer and is often diagnosed late when the cancer is advanced. Chances of survival are more likely if patients can be diagnosed earlier. Aim To derive and validate an algorithm to estimate absolute risk of having pancreatic cancer in patients with and without symptoms in primary care. Design and setting Cohort study using data from 375 UK QResearch? general practices for development and 189 for validation. Method Included patients were aged 30-84 years, free at baseline from a diagnosis of pancreatic cancer and had not had dysphagia, abdominal pain, abdominal distension, appetite loss, or weight loss recorded in the preceding 12 months. The primary outcome was incident diagnosis of pancreatic cancer recorded in the following 2 years. Risk factors examined included: age, body mass index, smoking status, alcohol, deprivation, diabetes, pancreatitis, previous diagnosis of cancer apart from pancreatic cancer, dysphagia, abdominal pain, abdominal distension, appetite loss, weight loss, diarrhoea, constipation, tiredness, itching, and anaemia. Cox proportional hazards models were used to develop separate risk equations in males and females. Measures of calibration and discrimination assessed performance in the validation cohort. Results There were a total of 1415 incident cases of pancreatic cancer from 4.1 million person-years in the derivation cohort. Independent predictors in both males and females were age, smoking, type 2 diabetes, chronic pancreatitis, abdominal pain, appetite loss, and weight loss. Abdominal distension was a predictor for females only; dysphagia and constipation were predictors for males only. On validation, the algorithms explained 59% of the variation in females and 62% in males. The receiver operating characteristic statistics were 0.84 (females) and 0.87 (males). The D statistic was 2.44 (females) and 2.61 (males). The 10% of patients with the highest predicted risks contained 62% of all pancreatic cancers diagnosed over the following 2 years. Conclusion The algorithm has good discrimination and calibration and could potentially be used to help identify those at highest risk of pancreatic cancer to facilitate early referral and investigation. More about this publication?
  • The British Journal of General Practice is an international journal publishing articles of interest to family practitioners and primary care researchers worldwide. The journal's 2010 Impact Factor is 2.07, making it the world's second most highly cited journal of general practice and primary health care.

    Recent issues: members of the Royal College of General Practitioners receive complimentary access to the British Journal of General Practice. Access is via the members' login area using your RCGP membership details. All users can freely access articles published up to 1 year ago, and the BJGP archive is available via PubMed Central.

    Email alerts can be enabled by registering with IngentaConnect. For information, see Help for web users.

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Source: http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/rcgp/bjgp/2012/00000062/00000594/art00022

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Nike Air Jordan Release Sparks Widespread Chaos


The holidays always bring out the crazy, but this is absurd.

A version of Nike's Air Jordan 11 Retro Concord shoe went on sale at midnight, with crowds lining up at stores across the country before they were even open.

An early crowd in Anne Arundel County, Maryland, outside D.C., had to dispersed by police this morning after chaos and unruliness ensued, authorities said.

Air Jordans

In Loudoun County, Virginia, more than 250 people gathered in a parking lot at the Dulles Town Center Mall because of advertised sales starting at 3 p.m.

Some managed to enter the mall before it opened, authorities said, overwhelming deputies and mall security and prompting frantic calls for assistance.

No arrests were made, though one woman suffered a leg injury and a pickpocketing was reported. Tickets for entry were later distributed by lottery.

In Annapolis, mall security requested police assistance around 5:30 a.m. Friday when an impatient crowd grew to over 500 people, according to reports.

In Indianapolis, a store’s door was torn off its hinges, while an Atlanta crowd also knocked down doors, and police had to pepper spray Seattle mall-goers.

Hey. This is a once-in-a-lifetime basketball shoe. Burns from pepper spray heal eventually, but there will never be another MJ. Just think about that.

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2011/12/nike-retro-air-jordan-release-sparks-widespread-chaos/

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

To Flirt In Cities, Birds Adjust Their Pitch

Northern cardinals have higher-pitched songs, but those sounds can get garbled in cities, so they've started to sing a little lower. Enlarge Dr. Scott M. Lieberman/AP

Northern cardinals have higher-pitched songs, but those sounds can get garbled in cities, so they've started to sing a little lower.

Dr. Scott M. Lieberman/AP

Northern cardinals have higher-pitched songs, but those sounds can get garbled in cities, so they've started to sing a little lower.

December 24, 2011 from WAMU

Have you ever been at a bar where it was just too loud to hit on anybody? Birds feel your pain.

A big part of being a bird is singing, often to attract other birds. Sometimes it's hard to do that amid all the noise in a city. For birds, it's like living in a bar, scientist Peter Marra says.

"Those sounds compete with low-frequency sounds," Marra says, and that makes it hard for birds that sing at a lower pitch to hook up.

But there's no stopping love, and Marra has found that those birds are changing their tune.

Turns out, urban birds like the gray catbird or the robin are singing differently from their country cousins. Marra, a conservation scientist at the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute, recently published his findings in the journal Behavioral Ecology.

"Those low-pitch sounds decline in five out of six species that we studied in urban areas," he says. "So birds have sort of tried to change their songs to higher-frequency songs or midfrequency songs."

High-pitched songbirds, like the Northern cardinal, have problems, too. "The buildings themselves absorb songs and refract songs," Marra says, distorting them especially in the higher ranges. The songs echo in weird ways and get garbled. Those birds, too, have changed their register.

The Carolina wren has narrowed the range of its tune when it lives in cities. It may be hard for us to hear the distinction, but we aren't birds.

Altogether, several of the species Marra and his colleagues looked at narrowed the range of their songs, cutting out the high parts and the low parts.

The broader implications of these audible adjustments are still unknown, Marra says.

"Animals are adjusting their communication. They're changing the way they speak," he says. "Their accents might be changing, but to what degree is this changing the number of young they have and how well they survive?"

Studies haven't looked into that yet, but Duke University's Steve Nowicki thinks it could mean something. "Bird song is learned, like human speech. It evolves culturally."

Nowicki studies animal communication and says young songbirds learn from older ones, so after a while differences in style emerge.

"We know that birds can be attentive to very subtle differences in their songs in the context of choosing whom to mate with," he says.

So if birds from the city can't flirt with birds from the country anymore, "those birds are actually going to be less likely to mate with each other," he says. "I mean, literally they're going to stop being able to speak the same language."

Nowicki says it's not yet clear whether a new species will emerge, "but it's certainly pointing in that direction."

One thing is clear from Marra's study: Humans are loud, and it makes city life hard for songbirds.

"It's not just about where they nest, it's not just about where they eat, it's also about how well they can communicate in this urban jungle," Marra says. There's more than a fun night out at stake ? a species has to survive to keep the conversation going.

Source: http://www.npr.org/2011/12/24/144102328/to-flirt-in-cities-birds-adjust-their-pitch?ft=1&f=1007

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NWS issues Tornado Watch for BR area

BATON ROUGE, LA (WAFB) -

The National Weather Service has issued a tornado watch for southeast Louisiana and southern Mississippi until 1 p.m.

The following Louisiana parishes are under the watch:

Ascension

Assumption

East Baton Rouge

East Feliciana

Iberville

Jefferson

Lafourche

Livingston

Orleans

Pointe Coupee

St. Charles

St. Helena

St. James

St. John the Baptist

St. Tammany

Tangipahoa

Terrebonne

Washington

West Baton Rouge

West Feliciana

?

The following Mississippi counties fall into the watch zone:

Amite

Pearl River

Pike

Walthall

Wilkinson

?

Forecasters also issued a severe thunderstorm warning for the area around 7:45 a.m. They said a line of storms was detected capable of producing hail and wind gusts up to 60 mph. The warnings for the area ended around 9 a.m.

The primary threats from the storms are frequent lightning and high wind gusts, which could down tree limbs and blow around small objects.

Reports from the Clinton area indicated some power lines were knocked down.

Click here for more on the severe weather

Copyright 2011 WAFB. All rights reserved.

Source: http://www.wafb.com/story/16375800/nws-issues-tornado-watch-for-br-area

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

Head of Customs and Border Protection resigns (CNN)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/178107922?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Mumford & Sons' New Songs Get 'New Life' On Tour

'Ghosts' is one song being road-tested for Sigh No More follow-up.
By James Montgomery, with reporting by Matt Elias


Mumford and Sons
Photo: MTV News

Mumford & Sons recently told MTV News that they're "still recording" the follow-up to their breakthrough Sigh No More album, which, while certainly understandable (given their schedule), is also rather unbelievable — especially since they've been working on the new spate of songs almost as long as they've been on tour.

"Most of them, we're letting people hear as we've played live shows. We've kind of always just done that," frontman Marcus Mumford explained. "We've kind of written a song and felt like we get it up to a point where it's ready to play live, and then we go ... and road test it, see how it goes. For us, we find that's a really helpful way of writing, and performing the song ideas that we have live is a crucial part, for us, of the songwriting process."

And that's especially true of "Ghosts," a new song the band officially unveiled last month during a Philadelphia radio station appearance. Though they've been working it into their live sets, the tune only took on its current — and, apparently, finished — form after performing it to audiences and tinkering with it afterward.

"It's probably the newest one we've been playing live, actually; that one came together really on our Canadian tour about a month ago, the first time started playing it," multi-instrumentalist Winston Marshall said. "We tried recording it before, but it then took on a new life when we played it on that tour. ... [The songs] always change when we play them live; the dynamics change a lot. When you play it to a new room, you're playing it to new ears, and you're listening to the song through their ears. So it's really great to feel the song out."

And though it's a new addition to their set, Mumford already count "Ghosts" among their favorites — if only for the fact that it actually gives them a chance to catch their collective breath.

"It's fun to play ... it's a kind of respite for us to just stand back and play a slower song," Mumford said with a laugh. "It's nice: gives us a moment to take stock."

Have you heard Mumford & Sons' new songs live? Share your thoughts below!

Related Artists

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1676434/mumford-and-sons-ghosts-tour.jhtml

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Friday, December 23, 2011

Colts get past Houston 19-16 for 2nd straight win

Indianapolis Colts' Joseph Addai is tackled by Houston Texans' Quintin Demps (27) and Brice McCain (21)during the first half of an NFL football game Thursday, Dec. 22, 2011, in Indianapolis. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy)

Indianapolis Colts' Joseph Addai is tackled by Houston Texans' Quintin Demps (27) and Brice McCain (21)during the first half of an NFL football game Thursday, Dec. 22, 2011, in Indianapolis. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy)

Indianapolis Colts quarterback Dan Orlovsky is tackled by Houston Texans' J.J. Watt during the first half of an NFL football game Thursday, Dec. 22, 2011, in Indianapolis. (AP Photo/AJ Mast)

Indianapolis Colts' Dan Orlovsky throws a pass during the first half of an NFL football game against the Houston Texans Thursday, Dec. 22, 2011, in Indianapolis. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy)

Houston Texans' Arian Foster is tackled by Indianapolis Colts' Antoine Bethea during the first half of an NFL football game Thursday, Dec. 22, 2011, in Indianapolis. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy)

Indianapolis Colts' Adam Vinatieri reacts with Pat McAfee following a 23-yard field goal during the first half of an NFL football game against the Houston Texans on Thursday, Dec. 22, 2011, in Indianapolis. (AP Photo/AJ Mast)

(AP) ? Reggie Wayne will always remember Thursday night's catch.

The man with the expiring contract caught a 1-yard touchdown pass from Dan Orlovsky with 19 seconds left, giving the Colts their only lead of the game in a 19-16 victory over AFC South champion Houston 19-16.

It's the second straight win for the Colts (2-13), who will now have to fight off St. Louis and Minnesota for the No. 1 overall draft pick. Orlovsky, who played the last two seasons with Houston, also won his second straight game after losing his first nine NFL starts.

"Reggie certainly had a spectacular game. Caught it well, was active in the running, just all around a terrific game," Colts coach Jim Caldwell said.

Houston was in a position to come to Indianapolis and simply tune up for the postseason.

Not a chance.

The Texans looked anything but playoff-ready. They settled for two field goals in the red zone, didn't convert a third down until getting a lucky bounce late in the fourth quarter, its running game was stymied late and the defense helped the Colts with three penalties on the decisive drive.

Houston (11-4) is now 0-10 in Indianapolis and still hunting for a first-round bye. The Texans still haven't scored more than 20 points in a game since Nov. 27.

When Brian Cushing broke through the line on the game's first play, sacking Orlovsky and stripping the ball, it looked like it might be a replica of the teams' first meeting, a 34-7 blowout. Arian Foster ran for 8 yards on the next play, then scored on a 9-yard burst off the left side to give Houston a 7-0 lead.

Foster carried 23 times for 158 yards but repeatedly stopped the Texans' runners in the red zone.

"We didn't turn the ball over nearly as much as we did in that (first) game," Caldwell said. "But beyond that, I think we were pretty good at protecting the ball. I think our defense played extremely well even though they ran for 171 yards. It was kind of a bend but don't break defense, but when they had to stop them in the red zone, they stopped them in the red zone.

Nobody got into the end zone again until Orlovsky took the Colts 78 yards in the final two minutes, thanks in part to three costly Houston penalties, two of them against rookie defensive end J.J. Watt. After a pass interference call against Glover Quinn put the ball at the Texans 1, Orlovsky lobbed the ball into the corner of the end zone and Wayne beat the coverage to make the catch.

"All in all, it was a great team win," Caldwell said. "When the offense needed a drive, we got it. When we needed a field goal we got it. When we needed a stop we got it."

Orlovsky was 23 of 41 for 244 yards with the one TD. Joseph Addai ran 19 times for 59 yards.

T.J. Yates wound up 13 of 16 for 132 yards in a return to his hometown.

And this one go down as the final home game for not only Wayne and Orlvosky, but also key Colts cornerstones such as Jeff Saturday and Robert Mathis ? and possibly even Peyton Manning, though Colts owner Jim Irsay told NFL Network that if Peyton Manning plays in 2012, it will be in Indianapolis.

"If the situation is where he's back and he's healthy, then I see him coming back and playing here," Irsay said before the game. "I think there is a lot of speculation about the draft pick and those sorts of things, but I think what you have to realize is this -- is the likes of Peyton Manning going to be seen again? It is not coming, if ever, for a very, very long time. You're not going to go in this draft or the next draft and get another Peyton Manning."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2011-12-23-Texans-Colts/id-4c1f22345e984cc69b23f5b7f3f6282c

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Paul emerges as outsider alternative in GOP race

Republican presidential candidate Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, laughs as he sits down with Elizabeth Rose Chamberlain, 3, of Epping, N.H., while campaigning at the Early Bird Cafe in Plaistow, N.H., Tuesday Dec. 20, 2011. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

Republican presidential candidate Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, laughs as he sits down with Elizabeth Rose Chamberlain, 3, of Epping, N.H., while campaigning at the Early Bird Cafe in Plaistow, N.H., Tuesday Dec. 20, 2011. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

Republican presidential candidate Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, signs an autograph on a baseball while campaigning in Exeter, N.H., Tuesday Dec. 20, 2011. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

Republican presidential candidate Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, stops to talk with lunchtime patrons while campaigning in Plaistow, N.H., Tuesday Dec. 20, 2011. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

Republican presidential candidate Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, poses for a photograph while campaigning at Sandy's Variety Store in Manchester, N.H., Tuesday Dec. 20, 2011. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

Republican presidential candidate Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, shakes hands while campaigning at Sandy's Variety Store in Manchester, N.H., Tuesday Dec. 20, 2011. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

(AP) ? Suddenly, Ron Paul is in contention to win the Iowa caucuses and do well in the New Hampshire primary two weeks before the first votes are cast, reflecting the fluidity of the Republican presidential race as well as the inability of the party's social conservative, tea party and establishment wings to coalesce behind a favored candidate.

Yet, while the libertarian-leaning Texas congressman is earning support for his tight-fisted fiscal positions, he's so out of step with the GOP mainstream on foreign policy and some domestic issues that even his most loyal aides doubt he can use his momentum to win the Republican nomination.

"I'm very much in the Republican tradition," Paul insisted Tuesday as he campaigned in New Hampshire before heading back to Iowa on Wednesday. "Very much in the American tradition."

True or not, this much is certain: Paul is having a major impact on the campaign. His outsider persona and refusal to acquiesce to the ways of Washington ? he's nicknamed "Dr. No" on Capitol Hill for voting against much legislation ? has earned him a loyal following that he's leveraged to build a strong organization in Iowa and elsewhere. The respect that has long eluded him in the party may finally be coming to him.

Still, it's questionable how far he can go.

"He can get 15 to 20 percent in a multi-candidate field but, just like in 2008, when the field gets down to three candidates, voters will focus more clearly and his support will wane," predicted Michael Dennehy, an unaligned GOP operative in New Hampshire. "And, fair or not, the majority of voters will not feel comfortable with their nominee being a 76-year-old man who generally comes across as a character in 'Grumpy Old Men.'"

Paul's rise comes as the final push to the Jan. 3 Iowa caucuses begins and Newt Gingrich becomes the latest candidate to slide in a race where Republicans have struggled to settle on an alternative to former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney. The ferment underscores the degree to which Republicans remain sharply divided over whether to select with a nominee seen as more capable of beating President Barack Obama or one seen more as the Democrat's ideological opposite.

In another sign of the fissures in the GOP, board members of a prominent Iowa Christian organization, the Family Leader, on Tuesday chose not to endorse anyone in the presidential race after failing to rally behind any one of the several strict social conservatives campaigning in Iowa.

Instead, the group's president, Bob Vander Plaats, and another prominent social conservative, Chuck Hurley, president of the Iowa Family Policy Center, threw their personal support behind former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, who is barely registering in polls.

"We've always said, the fear would be a fragmented vote, because we have a lot of good candidates," Vander Plaats said.

Separately, the national American Family Association on Tuesday endorsed the thrice-married Gingrich, the former House speaker. Gingrich helped the group raise money last year to campaign in Iowa against the retention of state Supreme Court judges who backed a 2009 ruling to allow gay marriage.

Tea party activists, many reluctant to support Romney, also have not rallied behind an alternative. The divide has prompted some prominent tea party groups to shift from the White House campaign and focus on influencing Capitol Hill.

With prominent social conservatives and the tea party divided chiefly among Santorum, Gingrich, Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann and Texas Gov. Rick Perry, Paul has emerged as a leading contender in some Iowa polls, along with Romney and Gingrich. The divisions among cultural conservatives have allowed Paul to cobble together a coalition, made up of strict fiscal conservatives and independent-minded Republicans, that has grown since the fall.

All that is good probably news for Romney, who all year long has been considered the Republican most likely to win.

Still, Paul's rise also reflects Romney's inability to seal the nomination early by becoming the chosen one of the establishment. The former Massachusetts governor launched a bus tour in New Hampshire on Tuesday and appeared ever more assured that his plan to win that key early state was working.

Romney was emphasizing his distinctions with Obama, asserting he would create an "opportunity society" while the Democrat would bring a welfare-dependent "entitlement society" if given a second term.

Elsewhere in New Hampshire, Paul expressed confidence about his prospects for strong finishes in Iowa and New Hampshire: "I'm doing very well."

He also answered rivals who have started assailing him at every turn, a signal that they recognize he's become a threat. He gave them an opening last week when he said he would not consider a military strike against Iran if there was proof the country had a nuclear military capability.

That sparked a heated exchange with Bachmann, who has called Paul's position "dangerous" and is trying to revive her campaign by attracting some of the tea party activists drawn to Paul.

Gingrich also jabbed at Paul's position.

He said Monday: "I cannot understand a mindset of somebody who says, 'Oh, they wouldn't do that with a nuclear weapon.' It strikes me that if they are willing to blow up a few of us, they would be thrilled to blow up a lot of us. And that's where I disagree."

A day later, Paul argued anew that his position was within the Republican mainstream "and very much on the side of emphasizing a strong national defense instead of intending that we can be the policeman of the world."

But his opposition to military intervention abroad stands in sharp contrast to GOP orthodoxy. Paul favors bringing all or almost all troops home from foreign bases, not just from conflict zones.

He also suggests that military intervention abroad is fueling anti-American terrorism.

"If we think they do this only because we're free and rich, I think we're really kidding ourselves," Paul told roughly 400 supporters packed into the Exeter town hall Tuesday night. "This isn't blaming America. It's blaming some bad policy from a few politicians."

Influential Republicans here and elsewhere, including Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad, have predicted Paul's position will keep a healthy share of GOP activists, who dominate the caucuses, from supporting him.

Among the skeptics is Rosie Ford, a 77-year-old retiree waiting to see Gingrich at a Mount Pleasant, Iowa, grocery store on Tuesday.

"I like Ron Paul," she said. "His ideas are very bold and I think we need bold right now. But his foreign policy kind of scares me. He's a little too bold on that."

While Paul's supporters are devout, he does not appear to be even a consideration for many Iowa caucusgoers.

A New York Times/CBS News poll taken in early December found him to be the second choice of only 3 percent of likely caucus-goers, a key consideration in the fluid race. The Des Moines Register's poll, taken about the same time, found him to be the second choice of 7 percent.

But a good showing in Iowa could propel Paul strongly into New Hampshire, where, unlike the caucuses, independent voters can participate.

"The challenge is greater than it is for Romney," said Drew Ivers, Paul's Iowa campaign director. "So we start at the beginning and try to get the dominos to tip. Though, he acknowledged: "After that, the numbers become a challenge."

___

Associated Press writer Shannon McCaffrey in Mount Pleasant, Iowa, contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2011-12-20-The%20Ron%20Paul%20Factor/id-1a7cea3d3125459b95ab98293e5c4c1a

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

Republicans Are Afraid the Iowa Caucus Might Get Hacked [Video]

Bachmann. Gingrich. Romney. Perry. Paul. Outside of Paul, that's a murderer's row of icky politicky politicans and a group so easy to poke fun of the jokes write themselves. More seriously though, the GOP believes hackers are targeting the Iowa caucus polling system to screw with results and mess with the Republicans. I wonder why! More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/XremcMz1lso/republicans-are-afraid-the-iowa-caucus-might-get-hacked

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Monday, December 19, 2011

'Drive' Is MTV's #2 Movie Of 2011

Hard to describe and hard to forget, the film (and Ryan Gosling's Driver) oozed cool.
By Kevin P. Sullivan


Ryan Gosling in "Drive"
Photo: FilmDistrict

In October, a Michigan woman filed a lawsuit against FilmDistrict for misleading her about the film "Drive." She claimed the movie's trailer promised a more action-packed film and "promoted the film 'Drive' as very similar to the 'Fast and Furious,' or similar, series of movies."

But the suit succeeded in only one respect: It perfectly described why we love "Drive" and why it's #2 on MTV's Best Movies of 2011 list.

Everything about "Drive" subverts expectations. The main character, played by Ryan Gosling, doesn't have a name besides "Driver" and rarely speaks. We root for him despite knowing nothing about him or what's going on behind his stares. All the audience has to go off is his affection for his down-the-hall neighbor Irene, played by Carey Mulligan, and his sudden, violent outbursts, which surprise with horror levels of gore.

This is all the more shocking when you consider that for the first 30 minutes of the movie, the story plays out in a slow and quiet way, more like a romantic comedy than a crime thriller. Driver's relationship with Irene puts the audience so off its guard that when the violence finally erupts, it's instantly unforgettable.

Director Nicolas Winding Refn sets up the film's opening chase sequence in a way that looks and feels like a "Fast and Furious" movie, but as soon as it starts, it stops — literally. Driver parks the getaway car to remain out of sight. It's a subtle move that sets the tone for the rest of the movie.

And speaking of tone, what other film captured as much attention for its use of music and atmosphere? The synth-laced soundtrack by Cliff Martinez and a collection of electro-pop songs had everyone talking. Out of context, the choice for the music doesn't make sense, but the second "Nightcall" drops in over the neon-pink title, all the pieces come together.

When describing the movie to others, most people struggle until they stumble upon the word "cool." "Drive" is cool in a way that most action movies with their overly muscular heroes and explosions could only dream of being. Gosling and Refn captured an exact balance of warmth and coldness, emotion and indifference that makes the film's look, sound, story and characters feel like instant classics.

All of these elements would make for a great film, but that would mean ignoring a stellar supporting cast. Albert Brooks oozed menace and dark humor as the villainous pizza parlor owner/low-level mob boss Bernie Rose, and Bryan Cranston continued his as the most likable actor working today as Driver's mentor Shannon.

For all its surprises and unexpected turns, "Drive" is our second favorite movie of the year. It took tired movie clichés and flipped them on their heads to make one of the most original and hard-to-forget moviegoing experiences in recent memory.

Stick with MTV as we count down the Best of 2011, including the top Artists, Songs, Live Performances and EDM Artists of the year.

Check out everything we've got on "Drive."

For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com.

Related Videos

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1676154/drive-best-movies-2011.jhtml

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Sunday, December 18, 2011

Jack scores 24 points, Hornets beat Grizzlies (AP)

MEMPHIS, Tenn. ? Jarrett Jack scored 24 points, Quincy Pondexter and Emeka Okafor added 12 apiece and the New Orleans Hornets beat the Memphis Grizzlies 97-90 in a preseason game Friday night.

The Hornets, playing their first game since the trade of star guard Chris Paul to the Los Angeles Clippers this week, scored six straight points to take a 95-89 lead.

Trevor Ariza scored 11 points for New Orleans, and Carldell Johnson finished with 10, while playing only in the fourth quarter.

Tony Allen led Memphis with 17 points, while Rudy Gay and Jeremy Pargo scored 15 each. O.J. Mayo had 12, but was 5 of 15 from the field.

Both teams used multiple lineups, giving starters time early, but allowing bench players to get most of the second-half minutes.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111217/ap_on_sp_bk_ga_su/bkn_hornets_grizzlies

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Man U eyes top spot

Image:AP

Manchester United's Wayne Rooney, left, is congratulated by teammates after scoring against Wolverhampton Wanderers during their English Premier League soccer match at Old Trafford Stadium, Manchester, England, Saturday, Dec. 10.

By STUART CONDIE

updated 2:11 p.m. ET Dec. 16, 2011

Manchester United manager Alex Ferguson is too focused on this weekend's match against Queens Park Rangers to give too much thought to the January transfer window.

If Manchester City loses to an Arsenal side that has already won 5-3 at Chelsea this season, United could overhaul its rival with a victory on Sunday and go to the top of the Premier League for the first time since Oct. 14.

Ferguson has striker Dimitar Berbatov back from an ankle problem but will again be without captain Nemanja Vidic, striker Javier Hernandez and midfield duo Anderson and Tom Cleverly.

But Ferguson said Friday he will only splash the cash in January if a long-term target becomes available.

"I don't know why people keep going on about it," Ferguson said. "Unless someone we have always been interested in appears."

Rafael Da Silva and Darron Gibson could also be available for the match, but midfielder Darren Fletcher is missing with the digestive disorder that could rule him out for the foreseeable future.

"We spoke about a virus, to protect Darren but it got to the point people were delving," Ferguson said. "It was getting uncomfortable so we decided to make it public.

"He has been in hospital for a few days."

United can briefly forget about the transfer window, injury problems, Champions League elimination and its resurgent neighbor with victory on Sunday. But QPR has lost only twice at Loftus Road this season, with Chelsea, Newcastle and Aston Villa among the sides that have failed to win there.

"We have a good record there and I hope we can continue that," Ferguson said. "They've done well and given themselves a chance of staying in the league by investing and bringing in a few players. It's going to be a hard game."

United has not lost in seven trips to QPR since May 1989, but its last visit was in March 1996, just before QPR's 15-year absence from the topflight began with a demoralizing relegation.

QPR manager Neil Warnock guided his newly promoted side to a 1-0 win over Chelsea in October and saw his team go ahead against Manchester City last month before losing 3-2.

"Queens Park Rangers have invested the right way," Ferguson said. "Neil Warnock realized that when you get into the Premier League you need big players. That gives them a better chance because it's an unremitting league in terms of the demands.

"Strangely, Norwich, Swansea and QPR have done well and adapted to the demands of the league. The real test, though, is in the second half of the season."

But QPR will be without key defender Anton Ferdinand because of a hamstring problem.

City hosts Arsenal on Sunday with almost as much attention focused on striker Mario Balotelli as on his team's chances of winning.

Balotelli was again pictured fighting with a teammate this week, with defender Micah Richards the latest player to square up to the temperamental Italy international.

"He said it was because he didn't pass the ball to him," City manager Roberto Mancini said. "It was a really stupid thing. It was nothing. After 10 minutes it was finished. I was always involved in problems on the training ground, with Trevor Francis and Liam Brady. It happens.

"This has happened with Mario four times now. He is the king for this. But it has happened with other players. However, Mario should pay attention, not just about this, but in every situation."

Arsenal is on a run of seven wins from eight Premier League matches and has won four of its last five away matches in all competitions. But the Gunners are still without Kieran Gibbs, Jack Wilshere, Andre Santos, Carl Jenkinson, Bacary Sagna, Lukasz Fabianski, Vito Mannone, Abou Diaby and Ryo Miyaichi.

Also Sunday, fourth-place Tottenham hosts Sunderland and Liverpool goes to Aston Villa.

On Saturday, it's: Blackburn vs. West Bromwich Albion; Everton vs. Norwich; Fulham vs. Bolton; Newcastle vs. Swansea; Wolverhampton Wanderers vs. Stoke; and Wigan vs. Chelsea.

Chelsea will have David Luiz available after the defender was suspended for Monday's win over City - the leader's first league loss this season - for picking up a fifth yellow card of the campaign.

? 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Man U eyes top spot

LONDON (AP) -Manchester United could briefly forget about injury problems, Champions League elimination and its resurgent neighbor on Sunday.

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Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/45700245/ns/sports-soccer/

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Saturday, December 17, 2011

Use the Valsalva Maneuver to Prevent Ear Pain When Flying [Flying]

Use the Valsalva Maneuver to Prevent Ear Pain When FlyingEar-popping pain is one of the hazards of flying. For some, especially kids or those with colds, Pain In The Ear or Airplane Ear can be quite severe. Mun Fitness Blog suggests several tips for preventing this condition, including the "Valsalva maneuver."

In the Valsalva manuever, you close your mouth and pinch your nose shut and exhale forcibly through your nostrils. You'll hear a "popping" sound and the pressure should be equalized in your ears. (Unequal pressure in your ears when the plane takes off or lands is the cause of Airplane Ear.)

Besides several other suggestions for preventing ear pain when flying, Mun Fitness Blog also offers a great tip for preventing ear pain that happens when driving:

Ear pain also happens while sitting in a car which come down from a steep mountain quickly with the window rolled up. Leave a crack in the window when descending or climbing a steep mountain will help.

I've always just chewed gum when flying. What's your strategy?

How to prevent pain in the ear when you are in the plane? | Mun Fitness Blog

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/-8aSieJoc_I/use-the-valsalva-maneuver-to-prevent-ear-pain-when-flying

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Elevation Dock for iPhone Embarrasses Apple

Your iPhone dock sucks. Despite its heft, you need two hands to prize your phone from its grasp, and good luck even getting your phone in there if it’s wearing a case.
And thousands of people agree, which is why the Elevation Dock has already blown past its Kickstarter goal of $75,000 and currently stands with [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/GearFactor/~3/6d5fkocQrO0/

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