Sunday, September 29, 2013

Former Vols Coach is also a Former Trojans Coach

Former Tennessee Vols Football Coach Lane Kiffin can now add Former USC Football Coach to his resume.

Kiffin was fired by USC Athletic Director, Pat Haden, just hours after the Trojans lost in conference play to Arizona State, 62-41 Saturday night. According to the school's website, Kiffin was given the news just after the team's plane touched down in Los Angeles early Sunday morning.

The Los Angeles Daily News reports Haden met with advisers during an Arizona State 28-0 run in the third quarter to discuss Kiffin's future with the team. It appears the AD and his advisers did not like getting trounced by ASU or the 6 other teams that have beat USC in their last 11 games, including last season.

Prior to Kiffin heading to USC for what he called "his dream job", he served as the Vols head coach for one season. He was hired back in 2009 and Kiffin?s record at UT was 7-6 in that one season. When he left the Volunteer State there were many saying good riddance.

In his four years at USC, Kiffin's record is 28-15. In 2012, USC was ranked #1 in the Associated Press Top 25, but finished the season unranked. According to ESPN.com, the Trojans are the first team in nearly a half-century to accomplish that one!

USC was hit with NCAA sanctions soon after Kiffin's arrival - he had nothing to do with that, but the sanctions did cost the school 30 scholarships over 3 years. NCAA sanctions usually hinder recruiting potential.

Coach Kiffin didn't lose too many fans when we left Tennessee...and by the chants of "Fire Kiffin" at the LA Coliseum just a week ago, it doesn't seem like he'll be missed by many in So Cal either.

According to an unnamed ESPN source, the Trojans assistant head coach Ed Orgeron will be named interim coach. Orgeron is also USC's recruiting coordinator and defensive-line coach. But another name being mentioned as a possible replacement is Vanderbilt's Head Coach James Franklin. Haden is expected to hold a news conference at USC sometime this afternoon.

Could Southern California be getting another coach from the Volunteer State and the SEC? Only time will tell.

(Photo Courtesy: Bobak Ha 'Eri)Former Vols Coach is also a Former Trojans Coach

Source: http://www.newschannel9.com/news/top-stories/stories/former-vols-coach-also-former-trojans-coach-7261.shtml

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Saturday, September 28, 2013

Shutdown threat puts heat on House GOP

WASHINGTON?Lawmakers from both parties urged one another in a rare weekend session to give ground in their fight over preventing a federal shutdown, with the midnight Monday deadline fast approaching.

But there was no sign of yielding Saturday in a down-to-the-wire struggle that tea party lawmakers are using to try derailing President Barack Obama's health care law.

Obama, in his weekly radio and Internet address, accused House Republicans of being more concerned "with appeasing an extreme faction of their party than working to pass a budget."

With pressure mounting on splintered Republicans, House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, scheduled a closed-door, lunchtime meeting of GOP lawmakers to see what, if any, legislation

House Majority Leader Eric Cantor of Va., center, walks to the floor of the House on Capitol Hill in Washington, Friday, Sept. 27, 2013, as Congress continues to struggle over how to fund the government and prevent a possible shutdown. ((AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite))

he could push through that might prevent large parts of the government from shuttering.

Failure to pass a short-term measure to keeping the government running would mean the first partial closing in almost 20 years.

With nothing much to work on, House members took to their chamber's floor and mixed name-calling with cries for compromise.

"I've got a titanium backbone. Let 'em blame, let 'em talk, it's fine," said Rep. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., about Democratic claims that the GOP would be at fault if the government must close.

She said the GOP wanted to keep the government open, but also wanted to reduce its size and "delay, defund, repeal and replace Obamacare," as the health law is known.

Should the House approve legislation on the looming shutdown, a vote seemed most likely Sunday, leaving little time for the Senate to respond on Monday.

Senators on Friday sent a bill to the House that would keep the government's doors open until Nov. 15. But Democrats removed a provision to defund the health law, officially called the Affordable Care Act.

The Senate's 54-44 vote was strictly along party lines in favor of the bill, which would prevent a shutdown of nonessential government services.

House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio walks to the floor of the House on Capitol Hill in Washington, Friday, Sept. 27, 2013, as Congress continues to struggle over how to fund the government and prevent a possible shutdown. ((AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite))

That followed a 79-19 vote to cut off a filibuster by Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, that exposed a rift among Republicans eager to prevent a shutdown and those, like Cruz, who seem willing to risk one over the health overhaul.

All 52 Democrats, two independents and 25 of 44 Republicans voted in favor. That included Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and most of the GOP leadership.

Cruz was trying to rally House conservatives to continue the battle over heath care. He was urging them to reject efforts by Boehner and other GOP leaders to offer scaled-back assaults on the law such as repealing a tax on medical devices as the House response.

Some conservatives were taking their cues from Cruz rather than party leaders such as Boehner hoping to avoid a shutdown. Closing down the government could weaken Republicans heading into an even more important battle later in October over allowing the government to borrow more money.

"We now move on to the next stage of this battle," Cruz said after the Senate vote. He told reporters he had had numerous conversations with fellow conservatives in recent days.

"I am confident the House of Representatives will continue to stand its ground, continue to listen to the American people and ... stop this train wreck, this nightmare that is Obamacare," he said.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., warned that the Senate will not accept any House measure that contains provisions opposed by Democrats.

He knows better than anyone that any single senator could slow down the Senate's ability to return yet another version to the House.

"This is it. Time is gone," Reid said.

If lawmakers miss the deadline, hundreds of thousands of nonessential federal workers would have to stay home on Tuesday.

Critical services such patrolling the borders, inspecting meat and controlling air traffic would continue. Social Security benefits would be sent and the Medicare and Medicaid health care programs for the elderly and poor would continue to pay doctors and hospitals.

The new health insurance exchanges would open Tuesday, a development that's lent urgency to the drive to use a normally routine stopgap spending bill to gut implementation of the law.

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Associated Press writers Josh Lederman and Alan Fram contributed to this report.

Source: http://www.denverpost.com/nationworld/ci_24196012/shutdown-threat-puts-heat-house-gop?source=rss

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Friday, September 27, 2013

University Heritage Language Programs on the Rise - Higher ...


by Laura Wides-Munoz, Associated PressHeritage Language Program

Heritage language programs, such as Chinese, Korean, Russian and Farsi, are increasing at universities.

MIAMI?Dorothy Villarreal grew up dreaming in Spanish, first in Mexico and later in South Texas, where her family moved when she was six. She excelled in school in English. But, at home, life was in Spanish, from the long afternoon chats with her grandparents to the Spanish-language version of Barbie magazines she eagerly awaited each month. She figured she was fluent in both languages.

Then the Harvard University junior spent last summer studying in Mexico and realized just how big the gaps in her Spanish were.

?We were talking about the presidential election, and there was so much I wanted to explain,? Villarreal said. ?We?d end up playing a guessing game where I?d speak in English, and my friends, they?d speak back in Spanish to guess what I was saying.?

Villarreal?s experience is increasingly common in America, where one in five children grows up in a home where English isn?t the sole language. To help them fill in the gaps, universities are adapting their foreign language curriculum, in part to better prepare graduates for a globalized world where it pays to be professionally fluent in more than one language.

Children in multi-lingual homes grow up a step ahead of other would-be language learners. They can easily engage in small talk or follow the latest soap opera in their families? native language. Yet when it comes to meatier topics, or reading and writing, they are stuck.

The linguistic gaps become apparent in high school, where these students can snooze through basic language classes but often drown in more advanced ones if their heritage language is even offered. After all, how many American high schools offer Arabic or Korean?

With 37 million Spanish-speakers in America, most heritage classes are in Spanish, and courses have bloomed across campuses in California, Florida and several Southwestern states. They have also begun to take hold in schools like Harvard University, which added a course this year.

Villarreal, who hopes to work in Latin America for an international business or for the U.S. government, ?and not make a fool of myself,? was among the first to sign up. She jumped at the chance to beef up her formal Spanish without the pressure of an advanced class with non-Latino classmates who might have thick accents but rarely misplace an accent mark.

That pressure, and the embarrassment of not being able to read or write a language they are supposed to know, can hold students back in regular classes, said Harvard Professor Maria Luisa Parra Velasco, who created the new Spanish course. So too can the stigma of speaking ?bad Spanish,? or a more colloquial version of a language they learned at home, she said.

Beyond language, the heritage class offers Villarreal a rare academic space to examine topics she?s less comfortable talking about with her mostly white and upper-middleclass peers. She contrasted the heritage class with the course she runs to immediately after: an advanced, general Spanish class on cultural practices of the U.S.-Mexico border. In that class, Villareal said she is uncharacteristically quiet.

?We?re talking in this abstract way about what the border is, and I?m thinking I went to school five minutes from the border. For me the border is what shuts down my school when the (Department of Homeland Security) helicopters come to find the people trying to cross,? she said.

Heritage language programs have existed in the U.S. in some form for more than a century as a way to retain both language and culture even as English-only movements waxed and waned. German schools were common in the late 1800s. Youth in California have long attended weekend Chinese and Japanese programs. Bilingual Spanish classes have been around for decades.

Yet the development of separate heritage language university instruction is relatively new. The University of Texas-Pan American received funding from the Department of Education in 2007 to create a minor in medical Spanish for heritage speakers, and other schools are beginning to replicate the program.

Spanish classes aren?t the only heritage courses on the rise. Harvard already has heritage programs in Russian, Chinese and Korean, which the U.S. government considers strategically critical languages for diplomacy and counterintelligence.

The National Heritage Language Resource Center at the University of California, Los Angeles, funded by the U.S. Department of Education since 2006, recently conducted the first national survey of higher education heritage instruction and found specialized instruction in 34 states. Chinese, Korean, Russian and Farsi were among the most popular after Spanish.

Separate tracks can be particularly useful for languages like Chinese or Hindi, where instructors are more likely to get heritage learners who can speak the language but can?t read even basic characters marking them as decidedly betwixt and between their beginning and advanced level classmates.

Arabic also poses unique challenges. Regional variations of the language can vary so much from the Modern Standard Arabic taught in American schools and used for business and diplomacy in the Middle East that a student who grew up speaking the language at home often can?t read, write or speak the more formal Arabic.

Still, heritage Chinese speaker Daphe Ko, a sophomore at the City of New York?s Hunter College, said mixing students like herself with those new to the language and culture can have benefits.

?They can identify a kind of grammar structure that I just took for granted, so we kind of help each other,? she explained.

Ko grew up speaking the Cantonese dialect at home with her family but couldn?t read or write, and she always wanted to learn Mandarin the dialect her parents spoke when they didn?t want her to understand. She?s now double majoring in biology and Chinese through Hunter?s intensive Chinese Flagship Center, created in 2011, which caters predominantly to heritage speakers.

Despite increasing numbers of these programs, funding for them remains limited. University of Pennsylvania Professor Emeritus Surendra Gambhir helped start one of the nation?s first higher education Hindi heritage language programs but said most of the 100 or so schools offering Hindi don?t have the resources to create dual language tracks. The Department of Education cut the Resource Center?s funding two years ago due to budget constraints.

Kimberly Potowski, a linguistics professor at the University of Illinois, Chicago, who is writing a textbook for heritage language professors, says there are significant differences in how language should be taught to heritage learners. For example, heritage students aren?t learning about exotic, foreign cultures, they?re reconnecting with their own. And rather than abstract exercises, they should be encouraged to interview relatives or to analyze emails to friends for grammatical mistakes.

The University of Miami has four heritage Spanish courses for students with different levels of fluency. The students view the language as a practical skill that can give them an edge in South Florida?s bilingual professional world. But even there, the personal experience the heritage is never far from the day?s lesson.

During a recent UM class, instructor Francisca Aguilo Mora presented works by Nobel Prize winning Spanish poet Juan Ramon Jimenez, who fled his country during the Spanish Civil War of the 1930s.

?Let?s think about our own families. Compare Jimenez?s exile to the one we know best,? Aguilo said. The mostly Cuban-American students, many of whose parents or grandparents fled Cuba after the 1958 revolution, nodded.

There was no translation needed.

Heritage language programs, such as Chinese, Korean, Russian and Farsi, are increasing at universities.

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Source: http://diverseeducation.com/article/56276/

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Thursday, September 26, 2013

Facebook app update now lets you edit posts

Facebook edit post

Facebook today has updated its Android app. And while there's no actual changelog?yet ? Facebook's still really bad about that for some reason ? TechCruch?points out that you can now edit posts. That's a feature that's been available on the beta track since Sept. 5, and it's good to see it roll out to everyone else.?

Trust us, you're going to like having this feature. (Which, by the way, Google+ has enjoyed for forever. But we digress.)

Get your download on at the link above.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/UPioKcL6S5w/story01.htm

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Sports cars, glamour usher in Bond novel

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Source: http://news.ninemsn.com.au/entertainment/8729175/bond-is-back-in-new-novel

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Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Playing with Your Dogs in Matrix-style Bullet Time Looks So Fun

Slow motion and Matrix-style bullet time was invented for this and this only: dogs. As in playing with dogs and recording them in bullet time with 52 GoPro cameras set up to freeze time. The video itself is already fun (if you have a heart) but the behind the scenes footage is almost just as interesting (if you like cameras).

Read more...

Source: http://gizmodo.com/playing-with-your-dogs-with-matrix-style-bullet-time-lo-1380761810

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Sony Xperia Z1: Is this the device to beat in 2013?

Z1

Sony announced the Xperia Z1 at the IFA earlier this month to a lot of fanfare. The device, codenamed Honami, had been rumored for over three months, and was leaked numerous times before Sony officially unveiled it. The device was said to feature a camera that is far better than anything else available today, which turned out to be true as the Xperia Z1 does come with a revolutionary 20.7 MP camera with a 1/2.3-inch sensor that includes Sony?s BIONZ image processing unit. However, unlike Nokia, Sony did not just attach a better camera to the back of a device already out in the market. It has made significant changes to every facet of the device, which makes the Xperia Z1 one of the best devices ever manufactured.

Design strengths and hardware prowess

z1-

The Xperia Z1 follows the same OmniBalance design as other Xperia mobiles launched earlier this year. The Xperia Z1 features a scratch-resistant glass back and front, along with aluminium sides. The 5-inch full-HD screen features Triluminos technology that claims to offer the widest colour spectrum on a mobile, and the pixel density count is also very high at 441ppi. The X-Reality mobile engine uses three different noise reduction algorithms to make sure that graininess and noise are significantly reduced. Sony was criticized for the screen on some of its earlier devices like the Xperia Z, which included an additional layer of film on the touchscreen to account for its water resistance.

z1-design

It is a great sign to see that the Xperia Z1 does not suffer from any such limitations, and it retains the water, dust and shatter resistance features seen on other Sony devices launched this year. The device comes with 2 GB RAM, 16 GB RAM and a 3,000 mAh battery, along with LTE connectivity and NFC. The screen is a delight, and the same can be said of the internal hardware, thanks to the inclusion of Qualcomm?s Snapdragon 800 (MSM8974), which comes with a 2.2 GHz Krait 400 CPU and Adreno 330 for the visuals. It is clear that Qualcomm has a stronghold on the mobile SoC market, as evidenced by the fact that all high-end mobiles launched over the last three months featured the Snapdragon 800.

Intel

This might change soon, though, if Intel has anything to say about it. In the latest round of benchmark scores, Intel?s Bay Trail processors have outdone anything that Qualcomm has to offer. But the caveat here is that Bay Trail hardware is still five to six months away, by which time Qualcomm is sure to unveil its next generation Snapdragon chips.

Already, rumours of a Snapdragon 1000 (APQ8084) have begun, which is said to feature Adreno 420 GPU. This is said to include DirectX11 and WebGL2.0, along with built-in decoding abilities for the H.265 video codec. So whatever Intel manages to achieve with Bay Trail, it looks like Qualcomm is ready to match it with its next-generation processors.

Sony wasn?t kidding about the imaging quality

xperia-z1-G lensThe Xperia Z1 is a beast when it comes to the imaging section. The mobile features a 1/2.3-inch 20.7 MP Exmor RS image sensor, combined with Sony?s BIONZ image processing unit. The larger sensor size allows in taking great images in low-light conditions, and is a similar technique used by HTC in the One, which featured a 1/3-inch sensor. Also included on the Z1 is Sony?s G Lens, which comes essentially is a 27 mm wide angle lens that also assists you in taking images in low-light conditions.

bionz_chart

The inclusion of the BIONZ image processing unit on the Xperia Z1 is a breakthrough.?The processor converts images taken using the Exmor sensor to a digital format, while minimizing any loss in image quality. This allows you to take a lot of images without any lag, and has led Sony to create the Time Shift burst mode, through which you can take a total of 61 images in 2 seconds. The processor is also used for fast auto-focus and motion detection.

Another new addition is SteadyShot image stabilization. Until now, the technology has only been used in CyberShot digital cameras, and with the Z1, Sony has decided to include it in a mobile. SteadyShot enables you to take distortion-free videos, as it works in conjunction with the BIONZ processing unit to detect motion and stabilize the lens automatically. In addition, the inclusion of an 81 mm optical zoom lens means that you can zoom 3x without any loss in image quality.

z1-f

Furthermore, Sony has included a bevy of new software utilities on the Xperia Z1, like the AR Effect, which allows you to add elements to your images and videos. Features like Social Live allow you to broadcast your images live to Facebook, and you can also view real-time comments and interact with your friends while broadcasting. Info-eye is an augmented reality tool that shows you additional information on an object or location when you take its image.

Overall, Sony has done a magnificent job with the Xperia Z1. It worked out the flaws that were inherent on the Xperia Z, and managed to include a stellar camera on a mobile that comes with great hardware. This isn?t the first time this year we?re seeing a great camera on a mobile. The Lumia 1020 showed us what can be achieved, but was ultimately let down by the fact that other than the camera, there wasn?t anything noteworthy on the device.

That is not the case with the Xperia Z1. It comes with a great design, and has the best hardware that is currently available in the market. In addition, Sony has gone out of its way to bundle freebies with the device, which include a 5,000 mAh external battery and a leather carrying cover, ?in countries like India,?where the?Sony Xperia Z1 price?is currently at $600 (Rs. 39,000). Moves like this guarantee that the device will sell well considering that Samsung?s Galaxy Note 3, the other high-end device launched earlier this month, costs $200 more and does not come with any additional incentives for users to invest in the device.

However, for all its innovations, there are a few minor issues with the device. The screen?s viewing angles are not that brilliant, and it loses out when seen against devices like the HTC One with its LCD3 screen. Also, it does not include the LTE band for India (Band 40), which might be seen as a deterrent to those who wanted to make use of the burgeoning 4G networks in the country. That being said, most manufacturers have ignored LTE Band 40, which should change next year as 4G become mainstream in India. It does however have LTE bands for carriers on most of the U.S. and European markets, so users in those countries should not face any issues while using the device with a 4G connection. For now, the Xperia Z1 is the best mobile available on the market, and sets the benchmark for all other mobiles that follow.

Source: http://thedroidguy.com/2013/09/sony-xperia-z1-device-beat-2013/

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