Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 announced, joins the Android tablet line-up with low-resolution 7-inch screen

Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 announced, joins the Android tablet lineup with a 7inch screen

If an 8-inch stylus-enabled Galaxy Tablet wasn't your cup of tea, perhaps Samsung's new 7-inch model will hit your screen-size sweet spot. The Galaxy Tab 3 has gone official and the third iteration of the company's first Android tablet arrives with a dual-core 1.2GHz processor, 8GB or 16GB of storage (with expansion up to 64GB), a 3- and 1.3-megapixel camera array and a substantial 4,000mAh battery. That 7-inch WSVGA (1,024 x 600) TFT display suggests it's likely to be a keenly-priced slate, although we're still waiting to hear on specifics. Samsung's loaded up the Galaxy Tab 3 with Android 4.1 and says that the WiFi version will launch "globally" in May, while an incoming 3G model (no LTE at this point, but it'll be able to make calls) will follow in June.

Filed under: ,

Comments

Via: The Verge

Source: Samsung Mobile

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/04/29/samsung-galaxy-tab-3-announced-may-release-date/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

knowshon moreno knowshon moreno sovereign citizen komen chrome for android hatchet leah messer

How to create your own stations in the Podcasts app for iPhone and iPad

How to create your own stations in the Podcasts app for iPhone and iPad

If you use the Podcasts app to listen and watch podcasts, you can also create custom stations that'll filter in podcasts based on which subscriptions you add to that section. You can think of stations as nothing more than creating playlists just like you do in the Music app.

Here's how:

  1. Launch the Podcasts app from the Home screen of your iPhone or iPad.
  2. Tap on the My Stations tab along the bottom of the screen.
  3. Now tap on the New Station button.
  4. Name your station and then tap Save.
  5. You'll now be taken to a screen where you can add from your current subscriptions to that station. Once you're done, just tap the blue Done button in the upper right hand corner.

That's all there is to it. Notice you'll have to be subscribed to podcasts in order to create stations, so make sure you do that first before you attempt to create custom stations.

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/MzuCIjAVE2w/story01.htm

danica patrick Michelle Laxalt Alabama Shakes PlayStation 4 michael jordan Safe Haven Robbie Rogers

Monday, April 29, 2013

Bringing major corporations to book for their crimes

Two new books tell the complex, fascinating and sometimes frustrating tale of attempts to hold multinationals to account for environmental and social crimes

  • Book information
  • Just Business: Multinational corporations and human rights by John Gerard Ruggie
  • Published by: Norton
  • Price: ?14.99
  • Book information
  • Make It a Green Peace! The rise of countercultural environmentalism by Frank Zelko
  • Published by: Oxford University Press
  • Price: ?22.50

Still no justice, nearly 30 years after the world's worst industrial disaster (Image: Raghu Rai/Magnum)

IT WAS the world's worst industrial accident. More than 3000 people died one winter night in 1984 in the Indian city of Bhopal, poisoned by methyl isocyanate gas belching from an agrochemicals factory owned by US-based Union Carbide. Tens of thousands were disabled. The cause was unambiguous, culpability seemed clear. But how to bring the company to justice?

There was a US parent company, but also an Indian subsidiary. Court cases proliferated in both countries. US judges decreed it was up to the Indian judiciary, but the US government declined to extradite company boss Warren Anderson to face charges there. In the end, the only people convicted were a few lowly Indian managers, who had been given charge of what many said was a defective plant.

The case remains a textbook example of the persistent failure of legal systems to hold multinational corporations to account for their failures. It features in Just Business, John Gerard Ruggie's fascinating account of his journey through the minefield of corporate accountability, on behalf of the UN.

Other examples he discusses include the toxic solvents and child labour used to make fashionable Nike sportswear in the 1990s, and the 60-year battle of the impoverished Ogoni people in Nigeria against Royal Dutch Shell, whose shareholders made billions as the Ogoni forests were poisoned by oil. Then there is Yahoo's widely condemned release of subscriber information to the Chinese authorities, which resulted in a whistle-blowing Chinese journalist receiving a 10-year jail term. Ruggie also points to the existence of child slaves on cocoa farms, recklessly polluting mining companies, and many more corporate villains.

Ruggie found that in each case, there was a failure to manage technology safely, to make proper use of the scientific evidence about toxicity and environmental pollution, or to recognise ethical dilemmas created by new data systems. Those failures were partly due to a global "race to the bottom", as corporations sought to cut costs. In each case, too, national laws seemed incapable of holding the new class of global corporations to account.

Ruggie's task for the UN was not only to try to pin down the issues, but also to find ways to help corporations to recognise that they ultimately had a vested interested in creating and abiding by codes of good citizenship.

Along the way, he devised what are now known as the Ruggie Principles. In essence, these hold that states must protect people against human rights abuses, including environmental abuse, while companies must respect those rights and show due diligence when trading with others, and that those who are harmed must have proper redress.

This is good as far as it goes. But Ruggie recognises that with law mostly constrained by national borders, corporate gunslingers have plenty of places to hide. As jurisprudence falters, public opprobrium may be a more potent weapon. Like capital, it cares little for borders. And while corporations appear strong, their brands ? the crucial interface with their customers ? are uniquely vulnerable to reputational damage. Long before the legal cases over Bhopal, Union Carbide was commercially crippled by the disgust caused by its killing of thousands of Indians. It was eventually bought out by a rival.

These days, to hurry such villains to the gallows, there is a new breed of multinational organisation dedicated to drawing attention to the failings of big corporations. Non-governmental organisations like Global Witness and Greenpeace bring these cases to the court of public opinion.

In Make It a Green Peace!, historian Frank Zelko charts the rise of Greenpeace. It began in the US as a bunch of west-coast hippies who, copies of the I Ching in hand, sailed into nuclear test zones in the Pacific to disrupt whalers. He records its transformation into professional campaigners, using media-savvy PR to wage war on brands they deem responsible for trashing rainforests, releasing toxins or warming the planet.

Early Greenpeace pioneers have written their own entertaining memoirs, but this densely sourced narrative is the definitive independent account, especially of the early years ? and is highly readable. Greenpeace emerges as a kind of green version of the Spanish Inquisition, engaged in crude but effective intimidation of corporate foes. When faced with a media frenzy over their activities, the companies swiftly "find" the road to green salvation.

Of course, the irony is that in the process, Greenpeace, too, has become a brand. It is still tainted, Zelko notes, by some false accusations it made in the 1990s against Shell, when the company ditched a decommissioned oil rig into the Atlantic deeps.

The stakes are high, but the lesson is that when it comes to holding mega-corporations to account, power over global media often trumps national law.

This article appeared in print under the headline "Nowhere to run..."

If you would like to reuse any content from New Scientist, either in print or online, please contact the syndication department first for permission. New Scientist does not own rights to photos, but there are a variety of licensing options available for use of articles and graphics we own the copyright to.

Have your say

Only subscribers may leave comments on this article. Please log in.

Only personal subscribers may leave comments on this article

Subscribe now to comment.

All comments should respect the New Scientist House Rules. If you think a particular comment breaks these rules then please use the "Report" link in that comment to report it to us.

If you are having a technical problem posting a comment, please contact technical support.

Source: http://feeds.newscientist.com/c/749/f/10897/s/2b4e30cc/l/0L0Snewscientist0N0Carticle0Cmg218291420B30A0A0Ebringing0Emajor0Ecorporations0Eto0Ebook0Efor0Etheir0Ecrimes0Bhtml0Dcmpid0FRSS0QNSNS0Q20A120EGLOBAL0Qonline0Enews/story01.htm

whitney houston will toyota recall northern lights sign of the times keystone pipeline purim acc tournament

Sunday, April 7, 2013

Swiss offer to mediate with North Korea

ZURICH (Reuters) - Switzerland has offered to mediate with North Korea as tension rises on the Korean peninsula following U.N. sanctions imposed in response to a nuclear weapon test in February.

The Swiss foreign ministry recently made contact with the North Korean authorities, a spokeswoman said, but added that there were currently no plans for any talks.

"Switzerland is willing to contribute to a de-escalation on the Korean peninsula and is always willing to help find a solution, if this is the wish of the parties, such as hosting meetings between them," she said in an emailed statement.

North Korea has issued increasingly strident warnings of imminent war with South Korea and the United States, telling diplomats on Friday to consider leaving Pyongyang.

Neutral Switzerland often mediates in international conflicts or hosts peace talks, in recent years helping broker a deal aimed at resolving a long-running conflict between Armenia and Turkey.

The Swiss Foreign Ministry said it had been involved in more than 15 sets of peace negotiations in the past seven years, including in Sudan, Colombia, Sri Lanka, Uganda and Nepal.

North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, who took over in December 2011 after the death of his father Kim Jong-il, is thought to have spent several years in Switzerland being educated under a pseudonym.

(Reporting by Emma Thomasson; editing by Andrew Roche)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/swiss-offer-mediate-north-korea-100337459.html

tyler clementi kevin kolb sarah shahi rutgers dharun ravi george clooney arrested ravi

Friday, April 5, 2013

Replace Your Car's Cassette Player with a Built-In, Hidden MP3 Player

Replace Your Car's Cassette Player with a Built-In, Hidden MP3 PlayerReplace Your Car's Cassette Player with a Built-In, Hidden MP3 Player We've talked about adding an auxiliary jack to your car before, but DIYer Ivan took it a step further and put a full-blown MP3 player in his car...hidden inside the cassette deck where thieves can't see it.

Hidden behind a fake cassette deck, Ivan installed a full MP3 player with a USB port where he can connect flash drives and play music through his regular stereo. That means he gets the best sound quality possible (not the crappy sound quality you get with a cassette adapter), he can control it with his steering wheel, and even see a timecode inside the cassette deck. He's also hidden an auxiliary jack behind the deck's rewind button, in case he wants to plug in a phone, iPod, or other device that doesn't work over USB. Check out the video above to see it in action, or hit the link below for the full breakdown of how it works?it's a really cool idea.

MP3 Cassette Player | Ivancreations via Hack a Day

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/qd0ZW0tEOGQ/replace-your-cars-cassette-player-with-a-built+in-hidden-mp3-player

vikings stadium breitbart dead db cooper fafsa branson missouri davy jones dead monkees