Monday, March 11, 2013

An Interview With John Sundman Firefighter, Techie, And E-Publisher On What It Takes For Creatives To Make It In A Start Up

jrs_simon_signJohn Sundman is best known for his seminal dot-com-boom cyberpunk novel, Acts Of The Apostles but in his long career he has been a truck driver, a fireman, a construction worker, and an early employee at Sun Microsystems. Sundman’s cult following has brought him world-wide acclaim. Now, however, he’s working at a startup. Tasked with managing software quality at Zola Books, an ebook reseller that aims to add a cool social aspect to the process of discovering, buying, and reading books, Sundman took a moment to discuss what creative types can do to make a dent in the startup ecosystem. TC: Tell us about yourself. Tell us about Acts. Sundman: I’m a 60-year-old bald guy, married to long-suffering Dear Wife; I’m a member of the company of Tisbury 651 (ladder) on Martha’s Vineyard, currently on leave of absence while I work in New York City as Director of Quality for Ebook startup Zola Books. I’m a long-time, if accidental, geek, and a novelist of some talent, slight output, and preposterous literary ambition. Since 1980 I’ve worked mostly for computer-makers and software startups in Silicon Valley and the Boston area as a technical writer, manager of publications, and similar. I’ve also done stints as a forklift operator, construction laborer, furniture mover, and agricultural development worker in West Africa. To the best of my knowledge, I’m the first person to ever have the title “Manager of Information Architecture” on a business card (Sun Microsystems 1987). My wife says I snore but she has never adduced evidence. My novel, Acts of the Apostles, which I published in 1999, is a thriller about nanomachines, neurobiology and brain-hacking, Gulf War Syndrome, and the cult surrounding a Silicon Valley tech genius bent on world domination. It’s not a perfect book, but I’m proud of it. Some people have said it’s the scariest book they’ve ever read. It’s been called the “greatest hacker book ever” and “the first great novel of the age of synthetic biology.” It’s also properly read as a lampoon of the whole hipster-geek messiah thing, Steve Jobs as Jesus or whatever. Hence the title of the book and the Christian allegory all through it. In any event, it’s a geeky book in the sense that those readers who have a working knowledge of VLSI design, Unix internals, and the music of Frank Zappa will have an easier time guessing the surprise ending. Some

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/GE7lkw4ZlxA/

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Sunday, February 24, 2013

Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0 official: 1.6GHz Exynos 4 Quad, 1280 x 800 display, HSPA+ 21, Android Jelly Bean 4.1.2

Samsung Galaxy Note 80 official 16GHz Exynos 4 Quad, 1280 x 800 display, S Penoptimized Flipboard app, HSPA 21, Android Jelly Bean

We knew another Note was coming. After all, Samsung Mobile head JK Shin confirmed the news back in January. But here at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, the tablet's finally been made official. If you haven't already inferred from its name, Samsung's latest S Pen entry boasts an 8-inch 1,280 x 800 TFT display. That puts it on par with the Note 10.1's resolution, although here users will obviously benefit from a more eye-pleasing pixel density (189ppi) and smaller 210.8mm x 135.9mm x 7.95mm (8.3 x 5.4 x 0.31 inches) footprint. Beneath that love it or hate it sealed plastic chassis, lies the company's Exynos 4 Quad processor clocked at 1.6GHz and paired with 2GB RAM, radios for WiFi a/b/g/n, Bluetooth 4.0, A-GPS, GLONASS and HSPA+ 21 (850/900/1900/2100MHz), up to 32GB of internal storage (microSD expansion available), in addition to a 4,600mAh battery. And, as with most Android products rolling out as of late, the Note 8.0 will ship with version 4.1.2 of Jelly Bean onboard -- skinned with the requisite TouchWiz UX.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/02/23/samsung-galaxy-note-8/

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Saturday, February 23, 2013

iPad weather app at a glance

iPad weather app at a glance

Comparing 18 iPad weather app current weather screens

Earlier in the week I compared the current weather screens of 27 popular iPhone weather apps, and in the spirit of equal time for expansive interfaces, here's the same thing for 18 popular iPad weather apps. The reason for the lower number is that not all of the iPhone apps had iPad versions, or build in iPad interfaces -- Apple's own iOS weather app included! While some of the iPad versions are just bigger, others take advantage of the larger screen and broader aspect ratio to show not just bigger but more.

Like before, I used the exact same location and page, whenever possible, for each app. I paid for full versions of in-app purchases to disable ads when I could, and when it worked. If extended forecasts could be brought up on the same screen, I brought them up. I made them as comparable as possible.

Here they are, in order, from top left to bottom right, are:

The current weather screen isonly one aspect of a weather app, and doesn't cover features like radar, videos, etc. so as the title says, consider this only a glance at different design approaches. For more on the individual apps, check out our weather app review series.

That being said, which weather apps do you use, and are they the same ones that appeal to you most in the comparison above? Any of the weather screens attractive enough they encourage you check out an alternative app?



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/sIf2ebv6aew/story01.htm

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Former UN chief says violence could mar Kenya vote

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) ? The former head of the U.N. ? the man who helped save Kenya from spiraling deeper into election violence five years ago ? warned Saturday that intimidation, ethnic rivalry and violence could undermine Kenya's March 4 presidential vote.

Kofi Annan said that Kenya is on a positive trajectory five years after postelection violence killed more than 1,000 people and forced some 600,000 from their homes. But he reminded Kenyans that their country stood on the "precipice of self-destruction" after the country's last vote.

"The elections must be peaceful, free and fair. They must be conducted in accordance with the rule of law. They must be carried out with integrity, and must reflect the will of the people. Only then will national unity, stability and cohesion be safeguarded," Annan said in a statement.

"Yet, intimidation, electoral violence and ethnic rivalry have the potential to undermine and jeopardize the whole process," he added. "And that is why recent violent events and increasing tensions in the run-up to the elections are deeply worrying. Kenya cannot risk a return to those dark days."

Annan in early 2008 helped broker a political deal between the top two contenders for president. That deal saw Mwai Kibaki remain president and challenger Raila Odinga become prime minister. Kibaki is not running this year because of term limits; Odinga is one of two top contenders for president.

Annan told Kenyans in his statement that elections should not be viewed as a winner-take-all competition. He noted that Kenya has a new constitution and an improved judiciary, and he said the results of free and fair elections must be respected, and disputes settled through the courts.

Annan had been making regular trips to meet with top officials in Kenya in the hopes of helping avoid election violence, but the former U.N. chief has not visited in several months because some Kenyan leaders began to see those visits as outside meddling

The March 4 vote sees a raft of local, regional and national level races. But unless Odinga or his top challenger Uhuru Kenyatta wins at least 50 percent of the vote, a run-off for president will be held, likely sometime in April. That vote holds even more potential for violence than the March 4 ballot, according to analysts.

Complicating this year's vote, Kenyatta faces charges at the International Criminal Court over allegations he helped orchestrate the 2007-08 election violence. Kenyatta and his running mate, William Ruto, are both due to attend a session at the ICC in mid-April, potentially right in the middle of the campaign for the second-round presidential vote. If Kenyatta and Ruto win, Kenya could face a situation where the country's president and vice president must attend court sessions at The Hague while running the country.

The United States, France and Switzerland have said that their relations with Kenya are likely to change if Kenyatta is elected, because of the charges he faces at the ICC.

Kenya's elections are the most complex the country has ever faced, according to a report released Saturday by the London think tank Chatham House. The ICC indictments of Kenyatta and Ruto have boosted their popularity among parts of the Kenyan electorate, said the report, but it added that the timings of the upcoming trials would "severely impede" the ability of the two to carry out their duties they were to win. The ICC court hearings could last several years.

The report concluded: "A more negative impact of the ICC's involvement is the way that it has raised the stakes of winning and losing the 2013 elections, and has contributed to the division of Kenyan voters into two opposing camps characterized by a strong ethnic logic."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/former-un-chief-says-violence-could-mar-kenya-123622851.html

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Friday, February 22, 2013

Bioversity International announces incoming Director General

21 Feb 2013 - Rome, Italy.

Bioversity International announces the appointment of Ms M. Ann Tutwiler as incoming Director General.

Tutwiler, currently the Special Representative of the Director-General to the UN/Geneva and World Economic Forum of the Food & Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations, brings extensive leadership and agricultural development expertise to Bioversity International. She joins Bioversity as Director General on 15 July.

?Ms Tutwiler is an outstanding candidate to take over the leadership of Bioversity International at a very exciting time for the organization,? says Dr. Paul Zuckerman, Chair of the Bioversity Board of Trustees. ?For nearly 40 years, Bioversity has played a key role in agriculture and conservation. The organization is working on innovative solutions to some of the most vital world issues ? malnutrition, climate change, poverty ? by connecting research with smallholder farmer and forest communities. Ms Tutwiler will help expand our partnerships and networks and continue to push for innovation in research. She is a leader in the field and I am certain her knowledge of the issues Bioversity is addressing will serve us well.?

Tutwiler succeeds Dr Emile Frison, who has led Bioversity International for two full terms since August 2003.

?Under Dr Frison?s leadership, Bioversity has developed a clear set of strategic priorities and a research agenda that the organization will continue to carry forward. He successfully guided the organization through a significant reform process to reinforce its position as a leading research institution. I sincerely thank Dr Frison for his many contributions, and I congratulate Ms Tutwiler on her appointment,? continues Zuckerman.

Tutwiler has almost 30 years of experience in agricultural policy and development working in the public and private sectors. She served as Deputy Director-General, Knowledge, at FAO from January 2011 through November 2012, where she coordinated development of cohesive Rome food agency positions on Rio+20 for FAO with the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), the World Food Programme (WFP) and Bioversity International.

As a member of senior management at FAO, she managed five technical departments including Agriculture & Consumer Protection, Natural Resources Management & Environment, Forestry, Fisheries & Aquaculture, Economic & Social Development and Office of Knowledge Exchange, Research & Extension. From June 2009 to January 2011, she worked in the Office of the Secretary for the U.S. Department of Agriculture, leading and coordinating USDA?s participation in the President?s Feed the Future initiative among other responsibilities. Previously, she served as Senior Advisor of International Affairs for the U.S. Agency for International Development, where she recommended reforms to USAID programs in relation to international development in Africa. She was managing director of agricultural markets at The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation from 2006 to 2009.

She holds degrees in Agribusiness from Purdue University and Harvard Business School, a master?s degree from the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University, and a bachelor?s degree from Davidson College, where she received the John W. Kuykendall Award for Community Service in 2005.

As the Director General, Tutwiler will be responsible for leading Bioversity International, forging effective research partnerships and overseeing the organization?s strategic priorities and research agenda.

?I?m excited to lead Bioversity International into the future,? said Tutwiler. ?The new strategic priorities and ambitious research agenda provide an excellent foundation to improve nutrition, livelihoods and sustainability and enabling productive and healthy ecosystems. I look forward to helping Bioversity deliver critical research for development outcomes, in close partnership with investors, researchers, governments, the private sector, smallholder farmers and forest communities.?

Bioversity International is a research-for-development organization working with partners worldwide to use and conserve agricultural and forest biodiversity for improved livelihoods, nutrition, sustainability and productive and resilient ecosystems. Bioversity International is working towards a world in which smallholder farming communities in developing countries of Africa, Asia and the Americas are thriving and sustainable.?

Bioversity International is a member of the CGIAR Consortium, a global partnership that unites organizations engaged in research for a food secure future. CGIAR research is dedicated to reducing rural poverty, increasing food security, improving human health and nutrition, and ensuring more sustainable management of natural resources. It is carried out by the 15 centres who are members of the CGIAR Consortium in close collaboration with hundreds of partner organizations, including national and regional research institutes, civil society organizations, academia, and the private sector.

For more information, please contact:
Bioversity International Office of the Director General
Tel: (39) 066118202

For media enquiries, please email:
Bioversity International Head of Communications
?k.khire(at)cgiar.org

Source: http://www.bioversityinternational.org/index.php?id=7350

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Rihanna and Chris Brown: Birthday, Bikini and Blunts in Hawaii!

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/02/rihanna-and-chris-brown-birthday-and-blunts-in-hawaii/

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The Horse Meat Scandals Reveal We Are More Psychologically ...

Dr. Raj Persaud?and Dr David James?/ Huffington Post Lifestyle / Feb 20, 2013

Recognizing cognitive ability in animals

Recognizing emotions in animals

Everyone?s getting upset because horses are turning up in our dinners rather than cows. But is it possible that this ?scandal? is revealing more about our relationships with animals and conflicts in our inner psyches, than the nutritional content of our meals?

We develop relationships with certain animals, such as horses, dogs and cats, so we assume they have ?minds?. But other animals, such as cows, are not kept as pets or companions, and therefore we decide they are ?mindless?, in comparison to horses.

A series of recent psychology experiments demonstrates the mental somersaults we are prepared to turn in order to eat some animals, while befriending others.

The research also reveals our malleable nature, explaining how we?re manipulated into waging war and killing others.

Psychologists Brock Bastian, Steve Loughnan, Nick Haslam and Helena Radke started their investigations into this subject because they were interested in the way we resolve inner conflicts.

Their study, recently published in the academic journal?Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, is based on the fact meat is central to diets around the world, yet most of us are also fond of animals, becoming disturbed by the prospect of harm to them. This inconsistency between a love for animals and enjoyment of meat, creates what the authors of this research refer to as a psychological ?meat paradox?.

We are conflicted because our concern for animal welfare is at odds with our culinary preferences. So the authors argue, people therefore avoid thinking about where meat comes from; the processes it goes through to get onto their tables. This involves a denial of the living and mental qualities of the animals, from which our meals are extracted.

One reason therefore the horse meat scandal is so emotionally disturbing is that we have suddenly been forced to confront unpalatable truths we prefer to be in denial about.

Love one, eat the other

Love one, eat the other

Brock Bastian and colleagues based at the Universities of Queensland and Melbourne, plus the University of Kent, contend that meat eaters routinely mentally disengage from the origins of meat. This reduces the strain aroused by enjoying meat but disliking the harm that animals endure to produce it.

Secondly the kinds of mental capacities we feel exist in animals we view as companions, such as horses, and which facilitate our relationships with them, now become inconvenient, if they also exist in cows, which we eat.

So the psychologists speculate people deny the existence of such mental capacities in animals they devour.

The authors of this new research entitled?Don?t Mind Meat? The Denial of Mind to Animals Used for Human Consumption?contend that recognizing that the animals we scoff have minds makes them similar to us in morally important ways, and this recognition conflicts with our use of animals for food.

People are afforded moral rights on the basis that they possess minds and it is this possession of a mind that affords us the right to humane treatment. Being reminded that animals have minds, but are killed for food, creates moral and psychological conflicts for meat eaters.

The authors argue that when people want to reduce the conflict between eating meat and their moral concern for animals, denying them minds is a particularly useful strategy. This is an extremely important psychological process and could explain atrocities and wars through history and all around the world; people deny minds in enemies to justify their ill treatment. It might also explain why the mentally ill have been particularly prone to harsh discrimination.

In the first experiment conducted by Brock Bastian (School of Psychology, University of Queensland) and colleagues, participants indicated the edibility of various animals and as predicted, animals considered appropriate for chomping were rated as having less of a mind than animals considered inappropriate.

In the second experiment participants looked at a picture of a cow and a sheep surrounded by grass. When either the cow or sheep was presented, it was described as living on a farm, including the description:

?This lamb/cow will be moved to other paddocks, and will spend most of its time eating grass with other lambs/cows?. When the cow or sheep was presented again in another condition of the experiment, it was described as being bred for meat consumption, including the following description: ?This lamb/cow will be taken to an abattoir, killed, butchered, and sent to supermarkets as meat products for humans?.

After reading each statement and looking at the pictures, participants rated the extent to which each animal possessed mental capacities. The results were that when reminded that an animal would be used for food, meat eaters denied it having a mind.

In the third experiment participants were explicitly instructed to write an essay about the processes involved in raising cattle/sheep on the farm right through to the eventual packaging of meat for human consumption. Participants were also told they would be sampling beef/lamb. In another condition of the experiment participants were asked to write the same essay but were told they would be eating apples.

At this point the experimenter placed a bowl of apples and a plate of appetizingly presented beef/lamb on the table. Participants then proceeded to write their essay in full view of the food they were about to sample.

The results of the experiment were that participants denied mental capacities to food animals when they were asked to think about the origins of meat. However, this denial was significantly stronger for participants who were told they were going to sample the animal. Participants who wrote about the origins of meat but were told they would sample an apple, did not deny mind or mental capacities to animals to the same degree, indicating they did not experience the same level of mental conflict.

By denying minds to animals, people bring their beliefs in line with eating meat. We change our minds and turn mental somersaults in order to justify to ourselves what we do.

This research has implications well beyond meat eating and dietary choice. Denying minds to others appears a widespread mechanism by which atrocities, wars and other harm to others is metered out.

This study also could explain why leaders keen to go to war and needing to take a more ambivalent population into war behind them, seek a pre-emptive strike. Once hostilities have been started people tend to believe the enemy deserves being killed ? our behaviour influences our thoughts ? rather than the other way round.

The study suggests a novel means by which wars and atrocities could be prevented in the future, as well as avoiding meat scandals. We could educate ourselves more, or be more educated, about the mental capacities of our enemies, and those we propose to eat.

This research suggests the real reason the horsemeat scandal bothers us so much is for deeper emotional reasons, than we are prepared to admit.

We become psychologically disturbed about killing or eating things that are too much like us.

Source: http://www.habitatforhorses.org/the-horse-meat-scandals-reveal-we-are-more-psychologically-screwed-up-than-we-realized-about-eating-animals/

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