Saturday, September 22, 2012

Beer flows as Germany kicks off Oktoberfest

AAA??Sep. 22, 2012?6:15 AM ET
Beer flows as Germany kicks off Oktoberfest
AP

Two women react, as they arrive for the opening of the famous Bavarian "Oktoberfest" beer festival as rain falls, in Munich, southern Germany, Saturday, Sept. 22, 2012. The world's largest beer festival, to be held from Sept. 22 to Oct. 7, 2012 will see some million visitors. (AP Photo/Matthias Schrader)

Two women react, as they arrive for the opening of the famous Bavarian "Oktoberfest" beer festival as rain falls, in Munich, southern Germany, Saturday, Sept. 22, 2012. The world's largest beer festival, to be held from Sept. 22 to Oct. 7, 2012 will see some million visitors. (AP Photo/Matthias Schrader)

A man wearing traditional Bavarian clothes wears a decorated hat with hops, prior to the opening of the famous Bavarian "Oktoberfest" beer festival in front of a beer tent during heavy rain in Munich, southern Germany, Saturday, Sept. 22, 2012. The world's largest beer festival, to be held from Sept. 22 to Oct. 7, 2012 will see some million visitors. (AP Photo/Matthias Schrader)

People waif for the opening of the famous Bavarian "Oktoberfest" beer festival in front of a beer tent during heavy rain in Munich, southern Germany, Saturday, Sept. 22, 2012. The world's largest beer festival, to be held from Sept. 22 to Oct. 7 will see some million visitors. (AP Photo/Matthias Schrader)

A waitress cleans tables and benches prior to opening of the famous Bavarian "Oktoberfest" beer festival, in Munich, southern Germany, Saturday, Sept. 22, 2012. The world's largest beer festival, to be held from Sept. 22 to Oct. 7, 2012 will see some million visitors. (AP Photo/Matthias Schrader)

(AP) ? The mayor of Munich has tapped the first keg of beer to kick off the 179th traditional German folk festival Oktoberfest.

With only two blows of his hammer and a cry of "O'zapft is" ? "It's Tapped" ? Mayor Christian Ude inserted the first tap into the first keg as the festival opened Saturday.

More than six million guests from around the world are expected to descend on the beer tents of Munich to celebrate Oktoberfest through October 7.

Last year's visitors consumed almost 8 million 2-pint (1-liter) mugs of beer. This year a mug, called "Mass" in German, sells at up to ?9.50 ($12.30).

German authorities keep security tight around the fairgrounds which accommodate hundreds of thousands of people at a time, although, they say, no concrete threat exists.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-09-22-EU-Germany-Oktoberfest/id-fdcf928df21d49918ca6ae50104f2909

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Friday, September 21, 2012

Oracle sees software growth amid weak hardware sales

BOSTON/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Oracle Corp's hardware sales are expected to drop further after tumbling 24 percent from a year ago, the software maker said, as it strives to turn around its Sun computer division amid tight technology budgets.

The company run by Silicon Valley billionaire Larry Ellison reported on Thursday that hardware product sales fell to $779 million in its fiscal first quarter ended Aug 31. It had forecast a decline of 7 to 17 percent.

This quarter it predicted a drop of 8 to 18 percent.

"It's a very competitive market and there is not a lot of strong demand," said Forrester Research analyst Andrew Bartels.

He said rivals including Cisco Systems Inc, Dell Inc, Hewlett-Packard Co and International Business Machines Corp are taking market share away from Oracle in the computer market.

Global Equities Research analyst Trip Chowdhry said his research shows the market began to improve in August, emerging from a "terrible" climate in the first two months of the quarter.

Oracle also reported that new software sales rose 6 percent from a year earlier to $1.6 billion, in line with its own forecasts.

It said that new software sales and subscription revenue would range from 5 to 15 percent this quarter.

FBR Capital Markets analyst Daniel Ives said while software was Oracle's bread-and-butter business and performing well, the hardware business was a "work in progress."

"They're focused on growth areas in the hardware business and are phasing out more of the commoditized parts of that business," he said, adding that the software outlook would likely be viewed as "healthy" by investors.

Oracle acquired Sun Microsystems, the world's No. 4 maker of server computers and also the developer of Java and Solaris software, for more than $7 billion in 2009.

Oracle met that key revenue target after reorganizing its sales operation in the United States, its biggest market, following the departure of Executive Vice President for North American sales and consulting Keith Block.

The world's No. 3 software maker had forecast that new software sales would climb between 0 to 10 percent from a year earlier when it last reported earnings on June 18.

Investors pay close attention to new software sales because they generate high-margin, long-term maintenance contracts and are an important gauge of the company's future profits.

Oracle posted first-quarter profit, excluding items, of 53 cents per share, matching the average forecast of analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

Oracle shares edged up to $32.28 in extended trade after closing at $32.26 on Nasdaq.

(Reporting by Jim Finkle; Editing by Richard Chang)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/oracle-sees-software-growth-amid-weak-hardware-sales-010418992--sector.html

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Abnormal carotid arteries found in children with kidney disease

ScienceDaily (Sep. 20, 2012) ? A federally funded study led by researchers at Johns Hopkins Children's Center has found that children with mild to moderate kidney disease have abnormally thick neck arteries, a condition known as carotid atherosclerosis, usually seen in older adults with a long history of elevated cholesterol and untreated hypertension.

The findings -- published online ahead of print on Sept. 13 in the Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology -- are particularly striking, the researchers say, because they point to serious blood vessel damage much earlier in the disease process than previously thought. As a result, they add, even children with early-stage kidney disease should be monitored aggressively and treated promptly for both hypertension and high cholesterol to reduce the risk for serious complications down the road.

The researchers caution they are not sure whether the same fatty deposits that clog adult arteries are the reason behind the abnormally thick carotid arteries they observed in the study. But because most of the children involved in the research already had high cholesterol and hypertension -- the leading causes of adult atherosclerosis -- the investigators believe they are dealing with a disturbingly early onset of this condition in an already vulnerable population.

"Untreated hypertension and high cholesterol increase the risk for long-term vascular damage in any child, but in a child with kidney disease they can wreak much more serious havoc," says study lead investigator Tammy Brady, M.D., M.H.S., a pediatric nephrologist at Hopkins Children's.

Chronic kidney disease by itself increases cardiovascular risk because of chronic inflammation and altered metabolism, the investigators say. But the presence of any additional risk factors -- such as obesity, high cholesterol and hypertension -- can further fuel that risk and put children with kidney disease on a path to early heart attack and stroke if left untreated, they add.

In the current multi-center study, which compared 101 children with kidney disease to 97 healthy children, the majority of patients with kidney disease had high blood pressure (87 percent) and elevated cholesterol (55 percent). One-quarter of them were overweight or obese.

Elevated cholesterol and chronically high blood pressure can cause fatty build-up inside the arteries and make them harder and stiffer. A narrowed carotid artery -- the neck vessel that carries blood from the heart to the brain -- not only restricts blood flow to the brain but is vulnerable to dangerous fatty plaque ruptures that can lead to heart attacks or strokes.

In their study, researchers performed neck ultrasounds to measure the internal thickness of the carotid artery. On average, children with kidney disease had carotid arteries about 0.02 millimeters thicker than those of children without kidney disease, but some children had arteries up to 0.06 millimeters thicker than their healthy counterparts. High blood pressure and elevated cholesterol increased the difference. Children with hypertension had arteries 0.04 millimeters thicker on average, and children with elevated triglyceride levels had arteries that were 0.05 millimeters thicker.

"We cannot emphasize this enough: Pediatricians who take care of children with chronic kidney disease -- even kids with early-stage kidney disease -- should screen them early for cardiovascular damage, assess their risk factors and treat hypertension and high cholesterol promptly and aggressively," Brady says.

An estimated 20 million Americans have chronic kidney disease, according to the CDC. Because chronic kidney disease often evolves silently over a period of years, researchers estimate that many adults with late-stage or end-stage kidney disease developed the disease as children.

Other institutions participating in the research included Cincinnati Children's Hospital, University of Texas, British Columbia Children's Hospital, Children's Mercy Hospital and Nationwide Children's Hospital.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Johns Hopkins Medicine, via Newswise.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. T. M. Brady, M. F. Schneider, J. T. Flynn, C. Cox, J. Samuels, J. Saland, C. T. White, S. Furth, B. A. Warady, M. Mitsnefes. Carotid Intima-Media Thickness in Children with CKD: Results from the CKiD Study. Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology, 2012; DOI: 10.2215/CJN.03130312

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/health_medicine/heart_disease/~3/qYvncMYGxZI/120920115627.htm

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Nike approves $8 billion share repurchase program

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Thursday, September 20, 2012

Hackers show the world how to steal an iPhone?s pictures, address book and browser history

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US home sales jump to highest since May 2010

This Tuesday, Aug. 21, 2012, photo, shows an exterior view of a home sold in Palo Alto, Calif. U.S. sales of previously occupied homes jumped in August to the highest level in more than two years, adding momentum to the housing recovery. The National Association of Realtors says sales rose 7.8 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.82 million. That's the most since May 2010, when sales were fueled by a federal home-buying tax credit. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma)

This Tuesday, Aug. 21, 2012, photo, shows an exterior view of a home sold in Palo Alto, Calif. U.S. sales of previously occupied homes jumped in August to the highest level in more than two years, adding momentum to the housing recovery. The National Association of Realtors says sales rose 7.8 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.82 million. That's the most since May 2010, when sales were fueled by a federal home-buying tax credit. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma)

(AP) ? A jump in sales of previously occupied homes and further gains in home construction suggest the U.S. housing recovery is gaining momentum.

Sales of previously occupied homes rose 7.8 percent in August from July to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.82 million, the National Association of Realtors said Wednesday. That's the highest level since May 2010, when sales were aided by a federal home-buying tax credit.

At the same time, builders broke ground on 2.3 percent more homes and apartments in August than July. The Commerce Department said the annual rate of construction rose to a seasonally adjusted 750,000. The increase was driven the best rate of single-family home construction since April 2010.

The pair of reports comes amid other signs of steady progress in the housing market after years of stagnation. New-home sales are up, builder confidence is at its highest level in more than six years and increases in home prices appear to be sustainable.

"The U.S. housing recovery is for real," said Sal Guatieri, an economist at BMO Capital Markets, in a note to clients. "Great affordability, pent-up demand and strong investor interest in rental units are driving the market."

The broader economy is also likely to benefit. When home prices rise, Americans typically feel wealthier and spend more. Consumer spending drives 70 percent of the economic growth.

And the Federal Reserve's plan to spend $40 billion a month on mortgage-backed securities to keep mortgage rates low "can only help," Guatieri added.

Still, home sales and housing starts are rising from depressed levels. Sales of previously occupied homes remain below the more than 5.5 million that economists consider consistent with a healthy market.

The number of first-time homebuyers, who are critical to a housing rebound, slipped to 31 percent from 34 percent. In a typical market, that figure is usually closer to 40 percent. Strict credit standards are making it harder for many first-time buyers to qualify for mortgages.

More Americans appear to be taking advantage of near-record low mortgage rates and prices that are, on average, much lower than they were six years ago.

Sales might be higher if more homes were available, the Realtors' group said. The limited supply is helping to lift prices. There were 2.47 million homes available for sale in August. It would take just over six months to exhaust that supply at the current sales pace. That's the typical pace in a healthy market.

Homes are selling more quickly than a year ago. The median amount of time that a home spent on the market was 70 days in August, the Realtors' group said. A year ago, the median timeframe was 92 days a year ago.

The median home price dipped in August to $187,400, but that is 9.5 percent higher than August 2011. That's the largest year-over-year price increase since January 2006.

One reason for the price gain is that sales of foreclosed homes and so-called short sales have declined. A short sale is when the seller owes more on the mortgage than the home is worth. Both foreclosure and short sales occur at steep discounts and can drag down overall home prices.

The lower supply of homes has boosted demand for new homes, which has made builders more confident in future sales.

Applications for building permits, a good sign of future construction, dipped in August to an annual rate of 803,000. Still, permits reached a four-year high of 811,000 in July, which was revised higher.

"Since builders are not taking out permits because it is fun to visit their local government office and pay fees, we can conclude that there should be a solid rise in construction in the months to come," said Joel Naroff, chief economist for Naroff Economics Advisors.

Jim O'Sullivan, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics, said home construction should add about 0.3 percentage point to overall economic growth this year.

"Housing is clearly in recovery mode," Sullivan said.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-09-19-US-Home-Sales/id-273d08a012a14fc99967f7aa300ae1f3

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House bill allows taxpayers to donate to Treasury

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Feel your taxes are too low? House Republicans have devised a new convenient way for those worried about government red ink to donate more to the Treasury.

And in a dig at President Barack Obama and his favorite billionaire, they have named the bill the Buffett Rule Act after investor Warren Buffett, who has said that he and other wealthy people don't pay enough in taxes.

The legislation, approved in the House on Wednesday and heading for an uncertain fate in the Senate, creates a checkbox on tax forms allowing taxpayers to make donations above their normal tax liability for debt reduction.

The original Obama-backed Buffett Rule bill, which failed in the Senate last April, would have required top earners to pay at least 30 percent of their income in taxes.

Obama "has used Warren Buffett as the poster-child for his class warfare scheme because Buffett complains that he doesn't pay enough in taxes," said bill sponsor Rep. Steve Scalise, R-La.

"The Buffett Rule Act is a common sense alternative to President Obama's divisive class warfare calls for higher taxes, and it allows Warren Buffett and others like him to voluntarily donate more of their money to pay down our national debt if that is what they're really interested in doing."

Rep. Sander Levin of Michigan, top Democrat on the Ways and Means Committee, said there was "nothing wrong with this bill except the label." The bill, he said, has "zero to do with the Buffett rule. It has everything to do with the absolute refusal of Republicans to face the basic issue," the level of taxes that the wealthy pay.

The chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, Rep. Dave Camp, R-Mich., said the bill offered a simple way for people concerned about the debt to contribute. Now, he said, people must either send a separate check or money order to the Bureau of Public Debt or go online to that website and use a credit card.

He cited Joint Committee of Taxation estimates that the bill would reduce the public debt by $135 million over 10 years.

Donations to pay down the national debt are tax deductible under current law.

The IRS already has a checkbox on its income tax form for making a $3 contribution to the presidential election campaign fund.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/house-bill-allows-taxpayers-donate-treasury-210311595--election.html

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OTTW INTERVIEWS 31 BITS : REVOLUTIONIZING BUSINESS

(Photo above courtesy of 31 Bits)

For OTTW's second exclusive interview, we got to chat up Alli and Anna, two of the five founding members of 31 Bits. Clearly?we've been obsessed with their jewelry and so very inspired by their incredible story. We are fans for life.?

Want to find out how a few college students turned their vision into a successful business??

Or learn more about social entrepreneurship done right??

Then you're not going to want to miss this interview.?

Alli Swanson and Anna Nelson, both 25 years young and the lovely women we had the pleasure of interviewing.

When did 31 Bits get started?

Right before our senior year of college. (The company was founded in 2008). In the beginning we had six Ugandan women designers, and now we have 115!

How did you guys take it from idea to action?

Kallie (the founder) went to Uganda, met these ladies, brought back a ton of handmade Jewelry, and we all loved it. We started thinking about a way to make it sustainable for these Ugandan women because they didn?t have a source of income but they had dreams of sending their kids to school. We were stoked on the product and thought we could sell it well, so we went to Uganda with Kallie the next summer to meet the ladies.

After that, it was kind of an?after-school?hobby. We never imagined it would turn into this. We all saw our lives going in different directions, but we couldn?t not do it. So we started selling it at craft fairs, school events, house parties, anywhere we could.

What was the turning point for you? Reef Sandals heard about us and approached us about making a sandal with our beads on it. We had a meeting with them, and they placed an order for thousands of strands of beads that they needed in a couple of months. That was the moment where it was like, wow, we can really make this something bigger. From the beginning we had prayed, ?God this is yours, do with it what you will,? and the order ?from Reef was when it was like, ?Alright, God! We?re hearing you.?

That's pretty loud and clear.?

Right. So we were almost forced to grow and become a legit business. We had to hire 20 to 30 more Ugandan ladies within the first two months of being back from Uganda. We barely had a name - we didn?t even really have a website yet. And it was a huge risk because we were hiring more Ugandan women, but we didn?t know if Reef would ever place another order, and we didn?t want to leave the women hanging afterwards, so it was a lot of pressure.

But it worked out. God has continued to build the company, open doors, and grow our business.

Did any of you have any prior business experience?

No, but we have amazing people around us who do. And we have so many resources. Our photographer is a friend from church, our stylist is his sister-in-law, and we?re just blessed to have a talented community around us that supports us and believes in our cause.

Where does the paper for the beads come from?

There are recycled paper marts in the capital city in Uganda that used to have tons of paper, so that?s where we've gotten it, but we?re exploring different options right now because Uganda is in a place where they?re almost out of paper. We still want to purchase it locally so we can create more jobs.

It seems like you?re really mindful about helping the local economy.

Definitely. We get all of our products from Uganda. The varnish that?s on our beads is from a local company, and if we need to print on top of the paper we use a printer that?s Ugandan.?

How long do these Ugandan women stay in your program? Is there a ?graduation??

They have four years before they graduate. When they enter we meet with them and evaluate their long-term goals because we want to make it very clear that this isn?t the end for them - this is just the beginning. Some of them are just excited to have a job and say they?ll roll beads for the rest of their lives, but that?s not what we want for them. That?s not empowerment. We don?t want them working for us forever - we want them going out and starting small businesses in that town and creating jobs for other women and building up that economy. We have 10 ladies graduating at the end of January (2013) and starting businesses of their own.

Is this the first group of graduates?

Yeah!

Wow, that?s so exciting!

We are so stoked. They?re all doing different things, too. Some have bought land to do farming, and one will be opening a hair salon.

So they?ve been saving the money they've earned through jewelry sales??

In our program they go through all different kinds of training from learning English to budgeting, and we really teach them the importance of saving. Now all of them have money saved up to start small businesses. And it?s a slow transition for the graduates because even though they graduate in January, they?ll still be with us part time for about six months so that they have a small source of income to help sustain them, and our managers will be meeting with them to support them.

They must be super excited.

They are, and that?s cool for us, too, because when we first told them that they would be leaving, they were so upset! Wailing and moaning. But now they?re ready, and it?s so great to see how they?ve caught that vision.

How did you decide to be an openly Christian company? It comes up naturally when people ask about our name because we get it from Proverbs 31. If people want to research why we?re doing what we?re doing, the heart of our company is our faith, and it?s really important to our Ugandan designers. They all love the Lord and they have worship days on the compound. Everything comes back to them thanking God for changing their lives through this opportunity, so we couldn't help but to include that in our mission statement. How do you keep things financially transparent for people who are skeptical of how much of the money they?re spending really goes back to the women in Uganda?


Since we?re not a non-profit, we don?t have to show our tax returns and all of that, but we are very open with where our money goes. It?s hard to explain because not a lot of people know how the Ugandan economy works, but all of our programs are funded by jewelry sales, so that goes to paying the women, but also all of the finance training and development programs they participate in. Everything we?re doing in Uganda, all of the shipping, and providing for over a hundred ladies every month is expensive. We knew it had to be sustainable for us here in the states, too. We try to cut costs as much as we can, budget things well, and make sure that we?re being very smart with our money. Roughly about 70% of our money goes back to Uganda. We don?t say that too much, because the percentage is constantly fluctuating, but that's about how much goes back.

I'm getting the feeling that you get this question a lot.

All the time. And we get a lot of people asking us why we?re a for-profit and not a non-profit, but the truth is, we?re selling a product, and we?re not operating off of donations. We want to show that business can be done right. We can be a for-profit and provide for these ladies by selling their products, and we hope that more businesses take this approach to things.

We have a designer who works with Kallie. We try to do really fashion forward stuff. Kallie is very eclectic and has always had a really good sense of style. We never want it to be a ?guilt buy.? We want people to buy it not even knowing that there?s a cause, but just because they love the jewelry and then hear about the story and be stoked. Because that?s what?s going to keep people coming back. We just try to be as innovative as we can with each line. We spend time researching what colors and trends will be in next season and keep reinventing our designs.

How are you working on getting recognized?

It?s really fun doing the PR and marketing now because the first two years it was hard - emails getting bounced back, people never responding. But now that we?ve created a platform and branded ourselves, we?re starting to see a response. Jessica Alba has been spotted wearing our jewelry, we?ve been in different magazines, Giuliana Rancic on E! News has worn our stuff.

And we?ve recently realized how huge fashion blogs are, so that?s been a big focus. We were just part of a big group doing fashion audience research, and we found that all these young women look at are fashion blogs - even more than magazines. Our generation is all about Pinterest and specific fashion blogs they follow, and that?s great marketing for us when we get on them.

You guys are still having fun?

Yeah we love it. And we get to work with our best friends. Anna and I (Kallie) and Jessie who is our Director of Sales all live together, work together, and hang out afterwards. It?s a fun season for us. Our company has moved into a new space, and we?re growing our team.




What?s next for 31 Bits?

We?re taking it as it comes. We?re getting into a lot of new stores, but they?re mostly smaller boutiques, so one big goal is to get into a Nordstrom, or Anthropologie, or Madewell, some sort of chain that?s more consistent and where we can reach a wider audience.

I can totally see 31 Bits in any of those stores.

Yeah, it?ll happen. We?re working on it. You have to get in with the right buyers, but I think we?re now at a place where it?s more feasible than it?s ever been. And we?re at capacity at our compound in Uganda, but we can see ourselves expanding to another part of Uganda closer to the capital and starting another branch. And then there?s always the dream of starting in a different country with a new product, but right now our focus is to get better with our jewelry. And we?ll be releasing a clutch soon --

Yeah that?s really exciting. The cool thing about beads is that there?s so much we can do with them. We?re open to wherever God wants us to be, and that's worked for us.

Do you ever experience culture clash? Seeing Uganda and then coming to Costa Mesa with all the affluence and indulgence?

When we make decisions about what we?re spending money on, it's always in the back of our minds. We try to live a lifestyle based on what we need. It is hard because we sometimes hear crazy stories about what our ladies in Uganda are going through. It couldn?t be more opposite from our lives here. At the same time, we can?t live here like we did in Uganda because that?s just not possible, but we?re always reminded to be really wise with our money.

There are a lot of people that want to get into social entrepreneurship. Any advice for them?

Do a lot of research. Find a need that you want to meet, and then ask a lot of questions to the right people about what the best way to do something is, because there are a lot of companies that aren?t familiar with the culture they?re about to get involved with that end up making things worse or offending people or doing a project that?s not necessarily what that group needs. And really work on quality. It?s huge for us that we have a quality product that?s worth the money customers are paying for.?

* * * * *?

Source: http://onethingtwoways.blogspot.com/2012/09/ottw-interviews-31-bits-revolutionizing.html

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Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Chicago teachers to consider offer, ending strike

CHICAGO (AP) ? Teachers in the nation's third-largest city will pore over the details of a contract settlement Tuesday as the clock ticks down to an afternoon meeting in which they are expected to vote on ending a seven-day strike that has kept 350,000 students out of class.

Some union delegates planned to take a straw poll of rank-and-file teachers to measure support for a settlement that includes pay raises and concessions from the city on the contentious issues of teacher evaluations and job security. But many warned the outcome remained uncertain two days after delegates refused to call off the walkout, saying they didn't trust city and school officials and wanted more details.

"It takes a lot to start a strike. You don't want to prematurely end it," said Jay Rehak, an English teacher and union delegate who planned to survey his colleagues at Whitney M. Young Magnet High School before voting at a meeting scheduled for 3 p.m.

As parental support for the strike waned, teachers came under pressure to quickly decide on the tentative contract that labor and education experts ? and even some union leaders ? called a good deal for the Chicago Teachers Union.

With temperatures dipping into the 40s Tuesday morning, a few dozen teachers gathered outside the Goethe Elementary School in Logan Square, a neighborhood in the west of the city.

Heath Davis, a seventh-grade science teacher, said he was optimistic that a vote Tuesday could end the teachers' first strike in 25 years, although concerns about the academic calendar, pensions and resources for special education have yet to be resolved.

"We don't want to move too quickly," said Davis, who is a member of the Chicago Teachers Union's House of Delegates. "We want to make sure our questions are answered,"

He said everyone is keen to return to the classroom.

"I'm desperately wanting to get back to my lab experiments with my kids," Davis said.

Irked by the union's two-day delay in voting on whether to send children back to school, Mayor Rahm Emanuel took the matter into court Monday. A judge has called a hearing for Wednesday morning to rule on the city's request for an injunction ordering the teachers back to work.

Members of at least one new parent group expressed frustrations that their children could not return to class after the teachers decided to stay out on Sunday.

"I was very disappointed," said Erica Weiss, who has been dropping off her 6-year-old daughter at a district-organized program each day but has to arrange for someone else to pick her up. She initially supported the strike, but more than a week was unnecessary, she said.

On Monday, teachers' picket lines appeared smaller and a passing jogger booed the teachers picketing at Mark T. Skinner West Elementary School on the near West Side.

"It's risky to extend the strike when everyone was expecting the strike to be over," said Richard Kahlenberg of the Century Foundation, a nonpartisan think tank in Washington.

Among the pending questions was whether Emanuel's lawsuit would stir up more trouble.

"If he wants teachers back in the schools, he should have stayed away from that type of action," Rehak said. "It only incites."

Both sides have only released summaries of the proposed agreement. But outside observers said the tentative contract appears to be a win for the union's 25,000 teachers. While teachers in San Francisco haven't gotten an across-the-board raise in years, for example, Chicago teachers are in line for raises in each of the proposed deal's three years with provisions for a fourth. In Cleveland, teachers recently agreed to the same kind of evaluation system based in part on student performance that Chicago has offered.

"The district went past the halfway mark," said Kate Walsh, president of the National Council on Teacher Quality. "They got a pretty good deal."

Some union members in Chicago praised the school district's move on what percentage of test scores will be factored into teacher evaluations, down from the 45 percent proposed to the 30 percent set as the minimum by state law. It also includes an appeals process to contest evaluations. The new evaluations would be phased in over the length of the contract.

The tentative contract calls for a 3 percent raise in its first year and 2 percent for two years after that, along with increases for experienced teachers. While many teachers are upset it did not restore a 4 percent pay raise Emanuel rescinded earlier this year, the contract if adopted would keep Chicago teachers among the highest-paid in the country. In Chicago, the starting salary is roughly $49,000 and average salary is around $76,000 a year.

The city also won some things from the union in the proposed settlement. Emanuel gets the longer school day he wanted and principals will have say over who gets hired at their schools, something the union fought. The district will be required to give some preference to teachers who are displaced and the school district will have to maintain a hiring list and make sure that at least half of hires are displaced teachers.

"We made a lot of progress," said Susanne McCannon, who teaches art at Whitney M. Young Magnet High School. "I'd like to be back in the classroom, but I want to be back in the classroom with the best situation possible."

___

Follow Sophia Tareen at http://twitter.com/sophiatareen

__

Associated Press writers Jason Keyser in Chicago, Steve LeBlanc in Boston, Terry Chea in San Francisco and Amanda Myers in Cincinnati contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/chicago-teachers-consider-offer-ending-strike-070544715.html

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Motorola launches Intel-powered smartphone

LONDON (Reuters) - Google's Motorola Mobility unveiled its first smartphone handset to be powered by an Intel processor on Tuesday, featuring a wide screen and longer-life battery to better compete against Apple's iPhone and Samsung.

The Razr i will launch in Argentina, Brazil, Britain, France, Germany and Mexico in October, as the first handset of a multi-device agreement between the two groups.

With a 4.3-inch display and Google's Android platform, the Razr i is similar to the Razr M unveiled earlier in September for U.S. consumers, but its brain is an Intel processor instead of a chip made by Qualcomm.

Choosing Intel's chips is unusual in the smartphone and tablet industry, where energy-efficient processors made by Qualcomm and Samsung using technology licensed by British group ARM Holdings are widely favored.

Intel dominates the PC industry but has been slow to adapt its powerful processors to work well in battery-sensitive mobile gadgets and is now rushing to catch up.

Motorola's Andrew Morley, the general manager of Britain and Ireland, said the new chip enabled users to switch quickly between accessing the web, playing games, sending texts and activating the camera. The screen has virtually no border, so it also compares well in size to other rivals.

"This chipset gives us exactly what we want to launch in these markets," Morley told Reuters. "It gives us the ability to create a compact device, it gives us speed and it's a mid to high tier, mass market device.

Motorola says the battery is 40 percent more powerful than Apple's iPhone 4S and the camera can take 10 shots in under a second. There were no comparisons available with the new iPhone 5, which hits the shops later this month.

The new Motorola phone uses a new version of Intel's Medfield smartphone processor running at 2 Gigahertz, faster than the 1.6 GHz versions used in phones launched earlier this year by Orange in Britain, MegaFon in Russia and Lava International in India.

Those phone launches were Intel's first significant foray into the mobile market, and the Medfield chips used in them have performed better than many skeptics expected.

The earlier Razr M includes Qualcomm technology compatible with high-speed Long Term Evolution (LTE) networks in the United States, while the Razr i is limited to slower 3G phone networks relied on more in Europe, Latin America and other parts of the world.

Offering the similar Razr i and Razr M phones, powered by Intel and Qualcomm chips respectively, will create a new opportunity for investors to compare the performance of the two companies' best chips.

The combined market for PCs, smartphones and tablets is expected to almost double over the next four years, but Intel's share of the processors used in them will dip from 35 percent to 29 percent, according to market research firm IHS iSuppli.

(Reporting by Kate Holton in London and Noel Randewich in San Francisco; Editing by Neil Maidment and Mark Potter)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/motorola-launches-intel-powered-smartphone-093101533--sector.html

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Tuesday, September 18, 2012

PFT: NFL Films president Sabol dies at age 69

John FoxAP

In Week One, the replacement officials looked the part, acted the part, and sounded the part.

In Week Two, they didn?t.

So after Monday night?s debacle in Atlanta, the NFL and the locked-out officials are gonna work this out, right?? Wrong.

We?re told that there are still no talks, more than two weeks after the two sides made a late run at getting it done by the start of the season.? And now that each side senses wobbly legs on the other side of the table, no one will pick up the phone.

It?s a simple reality of negotiations.? Whoever makes the first move is deemed to be overly anxious to do a deal.? So the NFL will wait for the NFL Referees Association to call, and vice-versa.

?This is not the NFL that we are used to seeing and we need to somehow light a fire under both sides to get back to the table, lock a door, and don?t leave until you have a deal,? FOX rules analyst and former NFL V.P. of officiating Mike Pereira said earlier today on The Dan Patrick Show.

But that?s the problem.? There?s no one to light a fire.? Perhaps more accurately, there?s no Moe Howard to clunk heads together.

The NFLPA possibly could give the league a kick in the butt muscle by filing a lawsuit or a grievance.? Congress could definitely get the league?s attention by convening a hearing (and then everyone complaining about the replacement officials would complain that Congress has better things to do).

The key will be for the locked-out officials to make the first move.? ?These regular guys I know do want to get back on the field because they?re hating what they see now,? Pereira said.? That meshes with what NBC officiating consultant Jim Daopoulos told Peter King in this week?s MMQB.? ?The officials want to talk. They want to be back on the field. To a man, they want to come back,? Daopoulos said.

And the NFL knows it.? And so the NFL will continue to hold firm, hoping that the next day, hour, or minute will be the day, hour, or minute when the phone rings.

The sooner the officials realize that and make the call, the sooner this will all get worked out.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2012/09/18/steve-sabol-nfl-films-president-dies-at-69/related/

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