Thursday, February 21, 2013

Sony's new DualShock 4 controller official: all-new design, touchpad, share button and more

Sony's new DualShock 4 controller official allnew design, touchpad and share button

We had a hint or two about its imminent arrival, but Sony's now made its next-generation DualShock 4 controller official at tonight's PlayStation 4 event in NYC. The company's Mark Cerny took to the stage to reveal the all-new companion, which has been redesigned and now features a more rounded form factor as well as what appears to be a slightly rubberized grip with "enhanced rumble capabilities." There's also a touchpad now (clearly taking a cue from the Vita), a headphone jack, that long-rumored share button, a light bar that, according to Cerny, will be utilized as a "more friendly way to identify players" and a stereo camera which is used to track the 3D position of the Move-compatible controller.

Not surprisingly, Sony's touting the addition of the "Share" button as one of the biggest features of the DualShock 4, allowing players to easily send tidbits like video clips and screenshots to sites social sites such as Ustream and Facebook. That's all we know so far, but we're sure to hear more about the DualShock 4 as the night progresses -- in the meantime, enjoy the gallery bellow and stay tuned to this post as we'll be adding more details as they come in.

Check out our liveblog of Sony's event to get the latest news as it happens!

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/KUI4bwDvNo0/

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DIY Map GPS 1.01 released for iPhone and iPad

Builtsoft developer, Leo McDuff, releases DIY Map GPS app available for iPhone and iPad mobile devices. The application is designed with a full-featured GPS system. This app gives users their current location by map matching their current GPS location with the map.

DIY Map GPS app could be very useful to all world travelers. When internet connection is not available on remote areas like on mountains, DIY Map GPS app could use offline maps. This provides information of main points and could be used to track previous trails. iPhone and iPad users could make use of this application anytime and anywhere they are as it designed for their convenience when they are traveling to places where they are not very much familiar of. For creating offline maps, they could refer to "How to create offline maps" over the internet.

DIY Map GPS is optimized for iPod, iPhone 4/5, iPad and iPad mini. It offers free download of 3,788 City Maps worldwide and free download of millions of points of interests. The app could be used with offline atlases that are created by Mobile Atlas Creator (Mac and PC) and use in offline and no data roam. Its useful features include weather, sunrise/sunset, flash and moonrise/moonset.

Features:
* Optimized for iPhone4/5, iPad, iPad mini, iPod
* Free download of 3,788 City Maps worldwide
* Free download of Millions of Points of Interest
* Use offline atlases created by Mobile Atlas Creator(PC&Mac)
* Create DIY Map through scanned map image(PNG, JPEG)
* Full-featured GPS system
* Use in Offline and No Data Roam
* Useful features(Weather, Sunrise/Sunset, Moonrise/Moonset, Flash)

iPad and iPhone could be a great traveler companion that serves well with the right application installed in it such as the DIY Map GPS app. This application could give travelers detailed maps and step-by-step directions to new destinations based on their current location. Generally, the product is highly beneficial with its advanced features specifically designed to be user-friendly to most travelers who carry portable devices with them.

DIY Map GPS 1.01 is $4.99 USD (or equivalent amount in other currencies) and available worldwide exclusively through the App Store in the Navigation category.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Appcraver/~3/B4pz-FDmebQ/

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Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Sunni protesters dig in as tensions flare in Iraq

RAMADI, Iraq (AP) ? Sunni protesters are camped out in dozens of tents festooned with tribal banners on the edge of this one-time Iraqi insurgent stronghold. They are digging in and growing more organized, vowing to keep up their demonstrations against a Shiite-led government they feel has left them behind.

The protesters will seek to bring down the government if their demands aren't met, warns a prominent Sunni sheik who once helped Americans battle al-Qaida in Iraq. He speaks ominously that armed militants who once fought U.S. troops could rally to the cause.

"When we give up hope that the government can reform itself, we will call for toppling it," Sheik Ahmed Abu Risha said in his well-guarded family compound near the banks of the Euphrates. "If this government does not disband itself, we will head to Baghdad and stage protests in the streets and paralyze the government's work until it falls apart."

When the last U.S. troops withdrew from Iraq in December 2011, there was hope that majority Shiites and minority Sunnis and Kurds would learn to work together, resolve their differences and create a healthy democracy in a country with a history of strong-arm rule.

But as the 10th anniversary of the March 20, 2003 U.S.-led invasion approaches next month, the same sectarian tensions stirred up by the war are flaring again ? in no small part, many Sunnis say, because of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's attempts to consolidate power.

Nobody is predicting a return to open warfare. The Sunnis know they stand little chance of overpowering the Shiites, who dominate the government, army and police. Nor do the majority of Iraq's Sunni Arabs, including protesters, support al-Qaida and its frequent widespread bombings of Shiite targets.

But Abu Risha's comments in an interview on Monday with The Associated Press point to growing impatience among demonstrators in the vast western province of Anbar and other predominantly Sunni areas. Their bitterness has only increased since the shooting deaths of several demonstrators by Iraqi security forces in nearby Fallujah late last month.

Abu Risha carries considerable weight in Anbar. He took over leadership of the province's Sahwa movement, a Sunni tribal militia that joined the U.S.-led fight against insurgents, after his brother was assassinated in 2007. The Sahwa members' decision to fight alongside American forces is widely credited with helping turn the tide against al-Qaida.

Cars heading to the border with Jordan and Syria detour along a well-worn dirt path to avoid a tent city straddling the highway outside Ramadi that has become the focus for nearly two months of rallies. The more than 50 tents now have cinder-block foundations built directly on the pavement to keep the rainwater out.

During a visit this week, power generators hummed as backhoes prepared for the next round of mass prayers and accompanying rally that are likely to draw tens of thousands again on Friday.

The arrest of bodyguards assigned to Finance Minister Rafia al-Issawi was the spark that set off the protests in late December. Al-Issawi hails from Anbar and is one of the power-sharing government's most senior Sunni politicians.

The demonstrations have little to do with the move against his staff anymore.

Sunni protesters complain they suffer from discrimination by the Shiite-dominated government. They accuse Baghdad of arbitrarily detaining members of their sect and say they are being targeted unfairly by a tough anti-terrorism law and policies designed to weed out members of Saddam Hussein's former regime.

Al-Maliki's government has called on security forces to show restraint toward the protesters and has set up a panel to consider their demands. It has taken some steps to address the grievances, like releasing detainees and moving to restore the pensions of some former state employees under Saddam.

Abu Risha said he and other senior protest figures are doing their best to keep the demonstrations peaceful. Protesters have occasionally thrown stones ? including at a senior Sunni politician not long after the rallies erupted ? but they appear to be heeding tribal and religious leaders' appeals not to take up arms for now.

"Horrible things would have happened if we hadn't been able to control these people," said Iraqi opposition lawmaker Ahmed al-Alwani.

That could change the longer protesters' rage simmers. Leaders of the demonstrations are demanding that the government hand over soldiers involved in the shooting deaths of five stone-throwing protesters late last month ? the first such deaths since the protests began. Soldiers have since been killed in apparent retaliatory attacks.

Abu Risha told the AP that if another Fallujah-style shooting happens, armed militants will likely get involved.

"There were armed groups that wanted to attack the army, but we prevented them," he said. "If the army continues such acts, we will not stop the resistance groups from dealing with the army. ... The national resistance will take over the task of protecting the protesters."

Asked to specify which militant groups might take up arms, Abu Risha named the Islamic Army in Iraq and the 1920 Revolution Brigades.

The two Sunni insurgent groups targeted American forces after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion. They do not share al-Qaida's fundamentalist ideology and some in their ranks have actively clashed with the jihadist group.

Both have voiced support for the protests. So has al-Qaida's local franchise. That has prompted concern from Iraqi and U.S. officials, who fear that extremists could draw support from the demonstrators' feelings of alienation and hostility toward the Shiite-led government.

The prime minister's spokesman, Ali al-Moussawi, dismissed Abu Risha's comments as being "outside the framework of the law and the constitution." He said the influential clan leader does not represent all the protesters and is seeking personal gain from the demonstrations.

But regional experts at the Eurasia Group believe the government's handling of the Sunni opposition is fostering a longer-term security threat in Iraq's west. Analysts Crispin Hawes and Ayham Kamel wrote in a recent report that al-Maliki's approach "plays into the hands of Sunni extremists."

Michael Hanna, a Middle East expert at the Century Foundation, said Sunni political leaders have not done enough to stem political violence and terrorism. But he questioned whether Sunni militants would try to confront Iraqi troops head on.

"The leaders are probably pretty dubious of where that leads. The security forces, for all their shortfalls, have become a real fighting force," he said.

Some protesters say the Fallujah shooting marked a turning point that has galvanized their call for reform. An empty coffin commemorating the "martyrs of Fallujah" lies in the middle of the Ramadi protest grounds.

"The shooting shows that the government has become more repressive against the Sunnis," said Sunni cleric Fakhir al-Taie, who was one of at least 20 wounded during the Fallujah melee. "Now we view the government as an enemy to us. ... The core problem is that we have no confidence in this government."

Fear of further clashes with security forces is one reason that protesters have not yet tried to march on the capital. Organizers considered holding mass prayers in Baghdad last week but later decided against it. The government sealed off approaches to the capital just in case.

Baghdad has been spared large-scale protests so far. Several hundred worshippers rally in the courtyard of a prominent mosque after prayers each Friday but do not take their protests any further.

Demonstrators have taken to the streets in other cities with large Sunni communities, including Samarra, Tikrit and Mosul.

Abdul-Hameed Younis Hamouda, a 60-year-old tribal leader and one of the organizers in Mosul, acknowledges that the government has addressed some of the protesters' grievances, but says it still has a long way to go.

"The delay in meeting our demands is not in the government's interest," he said. "Our patience is running out."

___

Associated Press writers Sameer N. Yacoub and Sinan Salaheddin in Baghdad contributed reporting.

___

Follow Adam Schreck on Twitter at http://twitter.com/adamschreck

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/sunni-protesters-dig-tensions-flare-iraq-185606341.html

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Jinzhou New China Dragon Moly's director resigns

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Tuesday, February 19, 2013

New system for composite automotive mass production | JEC ...

Such demand is driven by the need to reduce CO2 emissions and by the automotive OEM requirement to lower manufacturing costs through reduced cycle times, which will make carbon composites cost-competitive for mass production.

As the first qualified supplier of resin systems for the first real composite application for a mass production car, Huntsman will showcase its new Araldite? system designed for the high-pressure RTM process, allowing a 5-minute ?part-to-part? production cycle, which corresponds to more than 30% time saving in comparison to the first-generation HP-RTM commercial system.


http://www.jeccomposites.com/news/composites-news/new-system-composite-automotive-mass-production

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Activision Blizzard Results and The Western Union Company Report: (NASDAQ: ATVI), (NYSE: WU)

Source: http://finance.paidcontent.org/paidcontent/?GUID=23477586&Page=MEDIAVIEWER

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HBT: Hamilton says Dallas not a baseball town (true!)

UPDATE: this topic tickled my fancy, so I did a post running down what I think is the alpha-sport in each major league city.

I have not heard the interview yet ? and can?t find it ? but apparently Josh Hamilton has upset a lot of Rangers fans by saying Dallas is not a baseball town. Or that ?North Texas? is not a baseball area. Something to that effect:

Which, sure, I get why that upsets people, but is he wrong? If Dallas/North Texas isn?t football country there is no place on Earth that is football country. Out of the four major sports, the Cowboys have had less overall success over the past 15 years than the Stars, Mavs and Rangers, but they still suck up all of the oxygen. They still have that crazy stadium, fill it up and draw silly TV ratings. It has to be a football town, yes?

This isn?t a slight on the Rangers. I know they draw well and do well in the ratings themselves and that especially in the past few years they?ve really captured the hearts of people in Texas. Rangers fans really support their team. But there?s a difference between supporting one?s team and being a baseball town, isn?t there?

In my mind ?baseball town? or ?football town? is a zero sum game. You?re one or the other. Maybe the city shows for all of its sports teams, but if the town had to vote all but one of them off the island, which would it keep? In Dallas that has to be the Cowboys. And I think it may be more of a landslide there than anyplace else.

Thing is, there aren?t a ton of baseball towns these days. Off the top of my head I?d say Boston, New York, Cincinnati and St. Louis. Probably San Francisco, though that seems more recent (I?m mostly comparing how nuts the city seemed to go for the Giants in the World Series but not so much for the 49ers in the Super Bowl). Maybe Los Angeles, but my sense is that the Lakers are a bigger deal generally speaking.

Maybe I?m missing some. Occasionally I?ll hear Detroit mentioned, but while Detroit is a very good baseball city, I feel like the Red Wings hold more sway in some intangible way. There are probably people who will say that Boston is more of a Celtics place, but I don?t know. ?I?d be curious to hear what people from each town have to say. I?m obviously guessing to a large degree.

But I don?t think I?m guessing with Dallas. That?s Cowboys country. And even if Josh Hamilton saying it is more about him being somewhat dismissive to the city that will now boo him whenever he comes to town, he?s not wrong, is he?

Source: http://hardballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/02/18/josh-hamilton-says-dallas-is-not-a-baseball-town-and-hes-right/related/

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