Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Tim Cook downplays possibility of larger iPhone, cites quality, app trade-offs

With the sudden rush of 5-inch (and larger) smartphones hitting the market -- to varying degrees of success -- one may wonder if Apple plans to introduce one of its own. In response to a question on today's Q2 earnings call, CEO Tim Cook maintained his stance against such a move because of necessary tradeoffs in areas like resolution, white balance, quality, app compatibility and more. He stated specifically that Apple would not ship a larger phone "while such trade-offs exist", leaving just enough wiggle room for a future announcement where it can claim all those issues have been eradicated. Apple shipped the iPhone 5 with extended screen area and introduced a smaller iPad mini after Steve Jobs criticized other company's products in those categories -- we wouldn't be surprised if Cook is readying a similar move himself.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/UntLZw_-idg/

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House GOP preparing for debt showdown this summer

WASHINGTON (AP) ? House Republicans are preparing for another showdown over the debt ceiling this summer.

The House Ways and Means Committee passed a bill Wednesday to protect Social Security recipients and investors in Treasury bonds if the government hits the limit of its borrowing authority.

The bill would exempt interest and principal payments on Treasury bonds from the statutory debt limit. It would also exempt interest payments to the Social Security trust funds.

Republicans say the bill would avoid a default. Democrats say it prioritizes payments to foreign investors over funding important domestic programs.

In January, Congress suspended the government's borrowing limit until May 18, though Treasury officials are expected to take actions to delay a default until later this summer, perhaps in August.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/house-gop-preparing-debt-showdown-summer-155909882--politics.html

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Lawmakers ask if intel blocked before Boston bombs

Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., speaks with reporters following a closed-door briefing by intelligence agencies on the Boston Marathon bombing, on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, April 23, 2013. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., speaks with reporters following a closed-door briefing by intelligence agencies on the Boston Marathon bombing, on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, April 23, 2013. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., answers questions from reporters following a closed-door briefing by intelligence agencies on the Boston Marathon bombing, on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, April 23, 2013. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee, leaves following a closed-door briefing by intelligence agencies on the Boston Marathon bombing, on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, April 23, 2013. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

(AP) ? Lawmakers are again asking whether a failure to share intelligence contributed to a deadly attack on U.S. soil, after senior officials briefed them Tuesday on the investigation into last week's bombings at the Boston Marathon.

None of the lawmakers are saying ? yet? that better sharing could have stopped the bombings, as Congress did after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, that prompted an overhaul of the U.S. intelligence system.

But they are asking hard questions about which federal agency was tracking alleged Boston bomber Tamerlan Tsarnaev when he traveled to Russia last year, what they knew when, and what they did about it.

"There still seem to be serious problems with sharing information, including critical investigative information ... not only among agencies but also within the same agency in one case," Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, said after the Senate Intelligence Committee members were briefed by FBI Deputy Director Sean Joyce.

"I don't see anybody yet that dropped the ball," said Sen. Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga., the committee's vice chairman. But he added that he was asking all the federal agencies involved for more information to make sure enough information was shared.

"If it wasn't, we've got to fix this," he said.

Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said Tuesday, in testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee on immigration legislation, that her agency knew of the suspect's trip to Russia even though his name was misspelled on a travel document. A key lawmaker had said the misspelling caused the FBI to miss the trip.

Napolitano's disclosure came as news to Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., who told the secretary that it contradicted what he'd been told by the FBI.

"They told me that they had no knowledge of him leaving or coming back, so I would like to talk to you more about this case," Graham told Napolitano. She said that even though Tsarnaev's name was misspelled, redundancies in the system allowed his departure to be captured by U.S. authorities in January 2012.

But she said that by the time he came back six months later, an FBI alert on him had expired and so his re-entry was not noted.

Investigators have concluded based on preliminary evidence that the Russia trip may have helped radicalize Tsarnaev, the older of the two bomber suspects, who died in a firefight with police.

Tamerlan Tsarnaev was investigated by the FBI at Russia's request and his name was included in a federal government travel-screening database after that, law enforcement officials have told The Associated Press. One official told the AP that by the time of the flight Tsarnaev would have faced no additional scrutiny because the FBI had by that time found no information connecting him to terrorism.

Investigators are still searching for that kind of information, according to Senate Intelligence Committee Chairwoman Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif. "What did he do when he went to Dagestan? Did he sit in his family's house for six months or was he ... talking with people? What happened to him when he came back? Was he radicalized? If so, how?" she said, describing a litany of questions FBI investigators were still trying to answer.

She too conceded something likely would need to be changed about how the information was shared between the agencies.

"After every one of these incidents problems are found and then studied and corrected," she said.

There are "lessons to be learned ... not necessarily failures," said Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla. "But certainly gaps I think can be closed."

___

Associated Press writer Erica Werner contributed to this report.

___

Follow Kimberly Dozier on Twitter: http://twitter.com/kimberlydozier

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/apdefault/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-04-23-Boston%20Marathon-Congress/id-c7e666f41a0e487dbd30321f5c3b33ca

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Tuesday, April 23, 2013

FBI Missed Tsarnaev's Trip To Russia? - Business Insider

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Dagestan, Russia

The FBI did not know that deceased Boston Marathon bomber suspect Tamerlan Tsarnaev went on a six-month trip to Dagestan and Chechnya, Russia?in 2012 because his name was misspelled, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) said Monday.

?He went over to Russia, but apparently when he got on the airplane, they misspelled his name, so it never went into the system that he actually went to Russia,? Graham said on Fox News, saying he spoke to an assistant director of the FBI.

Graham's comments, first reported by Politico, inform why the FBI failed to realize that the 26-year-old was a terrorism risk.

The F.B.I. interviewed Tsarnaev and his family in Boston after Russia's warning, but found no sign of terrorism activity at the time.?

Anzor Tsarnaev, the father of the suspected bombers, told The Wall Street Journal that FBI?officers visited him about 18 months ago to discuss Tamerlan's interests.

"They told me they were watching everything?what we look at on the computers, what we talked about on the phone," he said. "I said that's fine. That's what they should be doing."

The New York Times reports that the trip?did not seem?to radicalize?Tsarnaev, who had?already begun?practicing devout Islam. But it could have provided the FBI with further incentive to find indications of violent behavior.

?One of two things happened,? Graham said Monday on Fox News, ?the FBI either dropped the ball or our system doesn?t allow the FBI to follow this guy in an appropriate fashion. I think once the Russians made the request, the FBI did a good job of looking at him. The reason we didn?t know he went to Russia is because the name was misspelled.?

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/fbi-missed-tsarnaevs-trip-to-russia-2013-4

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Fallout for states rejecting Medicaid expansion

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Rejecting the Medicaid expansion in the federal health care law could have unexpected consequences for states where Republican lawmakers remain steadfastly opposed to what they scorn as "Obamacare."

It could mean exposing businesses to Internal Revenue Service penalties and leaving low-income citizens unable to afford coverage even as legal immigrants get financial aid for their premiums. For the poorest people, it could virtually guarantee they remain uninsured and dependent on the emergency room at local hospitals that already face federal cutbacks.

Concern about such consequences helped forge a deal in Arkansas last week. The Republican-controlled Legislature endorsed a plan by Democratic Gov. Mike Beebe to accept additional Medicaid money under the federal law, but use the new dollars to buy private insurance for eligible residents.

One of the main arguments for the private option was that it would help businesses avoid tax penalties.

The Obama administration hasn't signed off on the Arkansas deal, and it's unclear how many other states will use it as a model. But it reflects a pragmatic streak in American politics that's still the exception in the polarized health care debate.

"The biggest lesson out of Arkansas is not so much the exact structure of what they are doing," said Alan Weil, executive director of the nonpartisan National Academy for State Health Policy. "Part of it is just a message of creativity, that they can look at it and say, 'How can we do this in a way that works for us?'"

About half the nearly 30 million uninsured people expected to gain coverage under President Barack Obama's health care overhaul would do so through Medicaid. Its expansion would cover low-income people making up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level, about $15,860 for an individual.

Middle-class people who don't have coverage at their jobs will be able to purchase private insurance in new state markets, helped by new federal tax credits. The big push to sign up the uninsured starts this fall, and coverage takes effect Jan. 1.

As originally written, the Affordable Care Act required states to accept the Medicaid expansion as a condition of staying in the program. Last summer's Supreme Court decision gave each state the right to decide. While that pleased many governors, it also created complications by opening the door to unintended consequences.

So far, 20 mostly blue states, plus the District of Columbia, have accepted the expansion.

Thirteen GOP-led states have declined. They say Medicaid already is too costly, and they don't trust Washington to keep its promise of generous funding for the expansion, which would mainly help low-income adults with no children at home.

Concerns about unintended consequences could make the most difference in 17 states still weighing options.

A look at some potential side effects:

?The Employer Glitch

States that don't expand Medicaid leave more businesses exposed to tax penalties, according to a recent study by Brian Haile, Jackson Hewitt's senior vice president for health care policy. He estimates the fines could top $1 billion a year in states refusing.

Under the law, employers with 50 or more workers that don't offer coverage face penalties if just one of their workers gets subsidized private insurance through the new state markets. But employers generally do not face fines under the law for workers who enroll in Medicaid.

In states that don't expand Medicaid, some low-income workers who would otherwise have been eligible have a fallback option. They can instead get subsidized private insurance in the law's new markets. But that would trigger a penalty for their employer.

"It highlights how complicated the Affordable Care Act is," said Haile.

?The Immigrant Quirk

Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer, a Republican, called attention this year to this politically awkward problem when she proposed that her state accept the Medicaid expansion.

Under the health law, U.S. citizens below the poverty line ? $11,490 for an individual, $23,550 for a family of four ? can only get coverage through the Medicaid expansion. But lawfully present immigrants who are also below the poverty level are eligible for subsidized private insurance.

Congress wrote the legislation that way to avoid controversy associated with trying to change previous laws that require legal immigrants to wait five years before they can qualify for Medicaid. Instead of dragging immigration politics into the health care debate, lawmakers devised a detour.

Before the Supreme Court ruling, it was a legislative patch.

Now it could turn into an issue in states with lots of immigrants, such as Texas and Florida, creating the perception that citizens are being disadvantaged versus immigrants.

?The Fairness Argument

Under the law, U.S. citizens below the poverty line can only get taxpayer-subsidized coverage by going into Medicaid. But other low-income people making just enough to put them over the poverty line can get subsidized private insurance through the new state markets.

An individual making $11,700 a year would be able to get a policy. But someone making $300 less would be out of luck, dependent on charity care.

"Americans have very strong feelings about fairness," said Weil.

Medicare and Medicaid chief Marilyn Tavenner, also overseeing the health overhaul, told the Senate recently that cost is a key question as the administration considers the Arkansas deal. Private insurance is more expensive than Medicaid.

But Tavenner said the Arkansas approach may be cost-effective if it reduces the number of low-income people cycling back and forth between Medicaid and private coverage, saving administrative expenses. "We are willing to look at it," she said.

___

Associated Press reporter Andrew DeMillo in Little Rock, Ark., contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/fallout-states-rejecting-medicaid-expansion-072613081.html

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Monday, April 22, 2013

Luis Suarez Bites Branislav Ivanovic's Arm During Liverpool-Chelsea Match (VIDEO)

LIVERPOOL, England ? In the latest chapter of Luis Suarez's controversial career, the Uruguayan bit the arm of Chelsea defender Branislav Ivanovic during Sunday's 2-2 draw in the Premier League and apologized a few hours later.

Suarez, who served a seven-game suspension for a bite during a Dutch league match in 2010, was foiled by Ivanovic as he attempted to kick the ball between the center back's legs in the penalty area. As the ball rebounded toward the edge of the area, Suarez turned to his opponent, and television images clearly showed him biting into Ivanovic's jersey at the top of the right arm.

Ivanovic shrugged off Suarez and immediately complained to referee Kevin Friend, who didn't see the incident and didn't speak to Suarez.

"I'm sad for what happened this afternoon," Suarez wrote on his Twitter account. "I apologize (to) Ivanovic and all football world for my inexcusable behaviour. I'm so sorry about it!!"

Minutes later, Liverpool issued a statement on its website that included harsh criticism from club officials.

"His behavior is not befitting of any player wearing a Liverpool shirt and Luis is aware that he has let himself and everyone associated with the club down," Liverpool managing director Ian Ayre said in the statement. "We will deal with the matter internally and await any action from the FA."

Rodgers initially refused to comment on the incident but joined in the criticism after watching replays.

"Having reviewed the video footage and spoken to Luis, his behavior is unacceptable and I have made him aware of this," Rodgers said.

In the Liverpool statement, Suarez said he had tried to contact Ivanovic to "speak to him personally."

"I apologize also to my manager, playing colleagues and everyone at Liverpool Football Club for letting them down," Suarez was quoted as saying.

Professional Footballers' Association chairman Gordon Taylor also was critical of the forward.

"It is very depressing and embarrassing that it should happen," he told BBC Sport. "If it wasn't for all the controversies he's been involved in he would be a more highly regarded player. Players are role models and are highly rewarded. This sets such a bad example."

In November 2010, Suarez was banned for seven matches for biting PSV Eindhoven's Otman Bakkal while playing in the Dutch league, earning him the nickname "Cannibal of Ajax."

Suarez was suspended for eight games in December 2011 for making racist insults to Manchester United defender Patrice Evra during a Premier League match.

And in the 2010 World Cup quarterfinal, Suarez's handball in overtime prevented a goal by Ghana's Dominic Adiyiah, earning a red card. Asamoah Gyan hit the crossbar with the ensuing penalty kick, and Uruguay advanced in a shootout.

On Sunday, Suarez also gave away a penalty kick with a needless handball, and Eden Hazard converted to put Chelsea ahead 2-1 in the 57th minute.

Suarez's goal in the seventh minute of injury time ? one more that initially signaled ? gave Chelsea the draw. He leads the Premier League with 23 goals and has 30 overall this season-

"I think it would be an injustice to Luis Suarez to talk about (the incident). He has been the best player in the league this season," Liverpool captain Steven Gerrard said. "I think he is the third-best player in the world behind Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo."

The late goal denied interim Chelsea manager Rafa Benitez a winning return to the club he led to the Champions League title in 2005 and the final of Europe's top competition in `07.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/21/luis-suarez-bites-branislav-ivanovic-video_n_3128283.html

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Sunday, April 21, 2013

Wang Yihan demolishes Eriko Hirose in Women's Singles semi-final ...

Wang Yihan demolishes Eriko Hirose in Women?s Singles semi-final of Badminton Asia Championships

China?s former World Number One Wang Yihan stayed positive and confident on court and reached into Women?s Singles final after demolishing Japan?s Eriko Hirose in semi-final encounter at Badminton Asia Championships 2013 on Saturday, April 20, in Chinese Taipei.

The second seed Yihan, who has been playing top quality badminton for the last few years, played with confidence and remained successful in defeating the seventh seeded Hirose while consuming just 36 minutes on court.

The Chinese shuttler was impressive in her shot selection and execution as she did not miss any chance to earn points. She maintained her focus on court and outplayed her Japanese rival in straight sets with a spectacular 21-12 and 21-6 score on the board.

On the contrary, the lower ranked Hirose could not maintain her focus on court as she was struggling to find a good flow. She employed all of her tactics but failed to produce any considerable result and eventually bowed down without getting a respectable total.

Yihan showed a wonderful aggression on court from the starting points of first game by creating a huge pressure on her rival.

Yihan was quite comfortable in taking the bird early and she did not encounter any complication in placing her strokes in right areas.

It was the experienced Yihan who showed no mercy to her aggressive rival in the starting half and grabbed a tremendous lead in the game.

The confused Hirose remained struggling in the arena and could not play positive game after the mid-game interval as she lost her focus in the arena.

Yihan was very calm and composed in the arena as she did not play negative badminton and wrapped up the first set with a staggering difference of 21-12.

Hirose geared up her speed to play positive badminton in the first half of second game but she failed to create pressure on her rival.

Yihan impressed the crowd with her incredible craft that assisted her to maintain pressure on her opponent who failed to find good rhythm.

Hirose failed to put up strong show in the second game of this match as her challenger Yihan played positive badminton and secured the set with a comfortable 21-6 difference on the board.

Source: http://blogs.bettor.com/Wang-Yihan-demolishes-Eriko-Hirose-in-Womens-Singles-semi-final-of-Badminton-Asia-Championships-a214594

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