Thursday, June 28, 2012

Should You Refinance Your Home Loan?

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When you can no longer effectively manage your mortgage, getting a refinancing is one of the options that you have. A mortgage refinancing makes your payments easier to manage by reorganizing the terms of your loan. On the other hand, refinancing also has its disadvantages, so be sure to read up on them prior to making it a final financial decision.

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Advantages

  1. When you go with a home refinancing, the most important benefit that you have is the ability to enjoy a decrease in interest rates.
  2. If the terms of your loan dictate that you pay the same rate until the end of the loan (fixed rate), you can ask to have it changed to an adjustable rate mortgage so that you?ll get to enjoy low payments whenever interest rates go down.
  3. Whether you?d like to pay off your loan in a shorter time, or would like a few more years added to it, you can choose to make your loan term longer or shorter.
  4. Refinancing your home loan means you can also get a bigger mortgage, which means that you can manage your other debts, like credit card debts and personal loans.

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Disadvantages

  1. A loan refinancing tells the lender that you are no longer able to do your part in your agreement with them, so they will penalize you.
  2. Should you decide to ask for a higher mortgage, you will need to be extra cautious about organizing your budget so you won?t fall into more debt.
  3. When you refinance, you?ll be spending quite a bit. Refinancing your home lone requires payment of closing costs, and also paying for private mortgage insurance premiums.
  4. If you get a home loan refinancing and eventually decide to sell your house, you will get a lower equity for it.

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Before making a home refinancing your final decision, be sure to consult an expert about it, and to ask for information on other options that might be better for you. Don?t forget that you?re supposed to be finding a way to quickly pay for your debt, not get caught even further into it.

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Video: Anticipating the Supreme Court?s health care ruling

When the aliens call, who'll answer?

??Science editor Alan Boyle's blog: A new poll suggests Americans would prefer to have Barack Obama rather than Mitt Romney in charge if extraterrestrials attack. Which raises a serious question: Who's really supposed to be in charge of responding to alien signals?

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Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Valley scorned in burger city rankings

Lobby's Tempe AZTravel & Leisure magazine just came out with its annual list of America?s best burger cities, and Phoenix didn?t make their readers? top 20. Apparently we don?t stack up to such burger-blessed locales as Savannah, Georgia (#12); Portland, Maine (#18); and San Juan, Puerto Rico (#5). Those readers obviously didn?t try any my 12 best burgers in the East Valley.

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Has Mitt Romney Successfully Etch-A-Sketched Yet?

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Saturday, June 23, 2012

Video: Madonna Badger: ?I don?t believe? ashes caused fire

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Look, no hands! Augmented reality gets a grip

1 day

FRANKFURT/HELSINKI One day in March 2000, just days before the dot-com bubble began its journey back to earth, German engineer Thomas Alt first glimpsed the future of technology.

"Do you know augmented reality?" his boss at Volkswagen asked.

He did not.

"Neither do I, but you are about to, because this will be your project," he said, dropping a stack of papers on his desk.

For the next three years, Alt developed a technology that overlays text or graphics on real-life images and objects. The resulting hybrid can be viewed on a smartphone, tablet or PC screen, and soon - the tech geek's fantasy - through dedicated specs.

Today, 37-year-old Alt partly owns Munich-based Metaio, one of the leading companies in the rapidly growing augmented reality (AR) industry. Along with dozens of other products, Alt has created an AR manual for Audi cars.

No more leafing through a crumpled manual to find out why the aircon's blowing hot in August. Point your phone at the offending gadget, and instructions pop up on the screen.

Augmented reality has been called the eighth mass medium, after print, recordings, cinema, radio, television, Internet and mobile phones.

By reaching out to media companies, the industry, which was a collection of smartphone apps generating less than $2 million in 2010, is on the verge of becoming a real business worth perhaps $1.5 billion in 2015.

"In the early days, we were talking about visionary ideas for the future. Today we come up with business models and products," said Maarten Lens-FitzGerald, co-founder and general manager at Layar, a Dutch start-up.

Layar, whose software has been downloaded more than 20 million times, hooking 3 million active users, has the world's most used consumer AR application, a reality browser that helps find services nearby, acquiring info on anything from favorite restaurants to networking opportunities via a mobile camera.

"We are actually making money and are becoming a little boring. But that is what the industry needs right now," said Lens-FitzGerald. "We actually try to hold back on visionary ideas. We are getting out of the gimmicky stuff."

Layar's demonstration video went viral in 2009. It showed period houses as seen from a boat on Amsterdam's canals. By pointing a camera at the houses, information about which were for sale and their prices is layered on the camera image.

Not for the faint-hearted, but another eye-opener for the house hunter, SpotCrime, by Popvox, will people the scene with the stylized muggers, murderers and burglars that have graced the neighborhood, too.

Chips with virtually everything
Sector executives speaking at the Reuters Media and Technology summit said most interest for their products came from the publishing industry and e-commerce.

Sweden's Ikea, famed for its low-price flat-pack furniture, has an app that lets you point a camera at a spot in your room and overlays an image of the furniture you are thinking of buying. Assembly is still down to you.

Heavy hitters are now throwing their weight behind the concept. Qualcomm, the top wireless chip maker, has bought up AR assets and opened its platform for software developers in 2010. ARM is also adding AR features to the chips it designs.

Chipmaker Intel has invested $14 million in Layar through its venture arm and is looking to add AR features to its chips.

Intel anticipated that ways of controlling a phone without touching it, such as by voice or by gesture, would be the next big developments.

The challenge is to make money out of those features.

"We would certainly anticipate a sharp rise in service adoption, although we would suggest that, given the continued uncertainty surrounding optimal monetization models, 2015 revenues are unlikely to exceed the $1.5 billion," said Juniper Research director Windsor Holden.

Laurence Tetrel Poupart, chief operating officer at Total Immersion, one of AR's front runners, agrees.

The company has been around since 1999 and expects to double sales this year to 20 million euros, but Tetrel Poupart said the technology has a little further to go to become a reliable money-spinner.

"We would definitely like to go for the virtual trying on of clothes, but some technical issues need to be resolved," she said, adding that the company needed faster chips to make the 'virtual dressing room' take off.

"We don't want you to see whether the clothing suits you but that it actually fits. We don't want it to be a gimmick, we want to have true usage, to reduce the return rate for the e-commerce merchants."

Try before you buy
Simpler applications have found their way to consumers, and businesses are very keen to use them.

Thomas Alt's Audi manual is one example. Another is a Layar application that helps publishers more easily link print and digital content. By pointing their smartphones at a magazine, readers can get information about products featured in articles, and go on to buy them.

"At the same time, companies get loads of feedback about consumer behavior, which they can use for marketing purposes," said Alt, who has also developed a similar product for German magazine Stern, owned by Bertelsmann's Gruner + Jahr publishers.

Currently more than 10 million German magazines with AR features hit the shelves every month, including titles from publisher Axel Springer.

Companies are lining up to use the technology, said Tetrel Poupart. "But we are now in a phase that we need to discourage companies from going for another gimmick."

Total Immersion has seen strong interest in its software, which allows consumers to try on glasses without physically touching them.

There is still a long way to go before augmented reality catches up with the movies, however; it is nearly three decades since Arnold Schwarzenegger as the Terminator viewed mission-critical data and images projected on the inside of his aviator shades.

Google has launched what it has dubbed "Project Glass" to develop such features, but it is viewed as a long shot.

"Since I started, this has been the ultimate dream in the industry. I don't buy it so much," Tetrel Poupart said.

"It makes you dizzy. I think we should use augmented reality in a more simple way and use the tablet. The tablet is a key device. It is here."

Eventually she expects traditional television screens - connected to the Internet with a built-in camera - to be a significant driver for both AR and the e-commerce industry.

"You use your television set as a mirror, trying on and ordering your clothes from your home."

Buyer beware -- if the trend continues, you'll have nowhere to go to wear them.

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Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Service employees union ramps up effort for Obama

In this June 8, 2012, file photo, President Barack Obama talks about the economy in the briefing room of the White House in Washington. Republican groups are heavily outspending their cross-party counterparts on television advertising in the early stages of the fall campaigns for the White House and control of the Senate, tempering Obama's financial advantage over Mitt Romney and sparking blunt expressions of concern from leading congressional Democrats. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

In this June 8, 2012, file photo, President Barack Obama talks about the economy in the briefing room of the White House in Washington. Republican groups are heavily outspending their cross-party counterparts on television advertising in the early stages of the fall campaigns for the White House and control of the Senate, tempering Obama's financial advantage over Mitt Romney and sparking blunt expressions of concern from leading congressional Democrats. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

(AP) ? One of the nation's most politically active labor unions plans to focus its resources on fewer states this year while working to help re-elect President Barack Obama.

The Service Employees International Union said Tuesday it will target its massive field campaign on turning out voters in just eight battleground states ? about half the number it focused on in 2008.

At the same time, the 2.1 million-member union hopes to get 100,000 of its members to volunteer in its political program, twice as many as in the last presidential race.

Overall, the union is expected to spend at least $85 million to help Obama win, similar to what it spent in 2008.

"It's a matter of figuring out where we can have the greatest impact," said Brandon Davis, the union's national political director. "You'll see an expansion of what we're able to do on the ground by being more efficient with our resources."

The eight states are considered crucial for an Obama victory: Colorado, Florida, New Hampshire, Nevada, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Virginia.

Davis said the union expects to make 13 million phone calls, knock on 3 million doors and have 1 million one-on-one conversations with voters in those states.

Despite a major setback for organized labor in the Wisconsin recall election on June 5, union households still make up about 25 percent of the national electorate and could be a decisive factor in states with large numbers of union members.

The SEIU played a vital role in helping Obama win in 2008, endorsing him over rival Hillary Rodham Clinton in the Democratic primary. The union's former president, Andy Stern, was one of the most frequent visitors to the White House during Obama's first two years in office.

This year, the union plans to increase outreach to Latino voters in Florida, Nevada and Colorado, black voters in Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, and young voters in all eight states. Davis said the union hopes to register about 600,000 voters around the country, particularly among groups of so-called "low propensity" voters who don't usually participate widely in elections.

"We think that's what creates the margin for the president," Davis said.

The union will also expand canvassing to include the general public in addition to union households, a product of the Supreme Court's landmark campaign finance decision in the case of Citizens United.

___

Follow Sam Hananel's labor coverage on Twitter: http://twitter.com/SamHananelAP

Associated Press

gaslight

US shadow wars rely on drones, computers

WASHINGTON (AP) ? After a decade of costly conflict in Iraq and Afghanistan, the American way of war is evolving toward less brawn, more guile.

Drone aircraft spy on and attack terrorists with no pilot in harm's way. Small teams of special operations troops quietly train and advise foreign forces. Viruses sent from computers to foreign networks strike silently, with no American fingerprint.

It's war in the shadows, with the U.S. public largely in the dark.

In Pakistan, armed drones, not U.S. ground troops or B-52 bombers, are hunting down al-Qaida terrorists, and a CIA-run raid of Osama bin Laden's hide-out was executed by a stealthy team of Navy SEALs.

In Yemen, drones and several dozen U.S. military advisers are trying to help the government tip the balance against an al-Qaida offshoot that harbors hopes of one day attacking the U.S. homeland.

In Somalia, the Horn of Africa country that has not had a fully functioning government since 1991, President Barack Obama secretly has authorized two drone strikes and two commando raids against terrorists.

In Iran, surveillance drones have kept an eye on nuclear activities while a computer attack reportedly has infected its nuclear enrichment facilities with a virus, possibly delaying the day when the U.S. or Israel might feel compelled to drop real bombs on Iran and risk a wider war in the Middle East.

The high-tech warfare allows Obama to target what the administration sees as the greatest threats to U.S. security, without the cost and liabilities of sending a swarm of ground troops to capture territory; some of them almost certainly would come home maimed or dead.

But it also raises questions about accountability and the implications for international norms regarding the use of force outside of traditional armed conflict. The White House took an incremental step Friday toward greater openness about the basic dimensions of its shadowy wars by telling Congress for the first time that the U.S. military has been launching lethal attacks on terrorist targets in Somalia and Yemen. It did not mention drones, and its admission did not apply to CIA operations.

"Congressional oversight of these operations appears to be cursory and insufficient," said Steven Aftergood, an expert on government secrecy issues for the Federation of American Scientists, a private group.

"It is Congress' responsibility to declare war under the Constitution, but instead it appears to have adopted a largely passive role while the executive takes the initiative in war fighting," Aftergood said in an interview.

That's partly because lawmakers relinquished their authority by passing a law just after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks that essentially granted the White House open-ended authority for armed action against al-Qaida.

Secret wars are not new.

For decades, the CIA has carried out covert operations abroad at the president's direction and with congressional notice. It armed the mujahedeen in Afghanistan who fought Soviet occupiers in the 1980s, for example. In recent years the U.S. military's secretive commando units have operated more widely, even in countries where the U.S. is not at war, and that's blurred the lines between the intelligence and military spheres.

In this shroud of secrecy, leaks to the news media of classified details about certain covert operations have led to charges that the White House orchestrated the revelations to bolster Obama's national security credentials and thereby improve his re-election chances. The White House has denied the accusations.

The leaks exposed details of U.S. computer virus attacks on Iran's nuclear program, the foiling of an al-Qaida bomb plot targeting U.S. aircraft, and other secret operations.

Two U.S. attorneys are heading separate FBI investigations into leaks of national security information, and Congress is conducting its own probe.

It's not just the news media that has pressed the administration for information about its shadowy wars.

Some in Congress, particularly those lawmakers most skeptical of the need for U.S. foreign interventions, are objecting to the administration's drone wars. They are demanding a fuller explanation of how, for example, drone strikes are authorized and executed in cases in which the identity of the targeted terrorist is not confirmed.

"Our drone campaigns already have virtually no transparency, accountability or oversight," Rep. Dennis Kucinich, D-Ohio, and 25 other mostly anti-war members of Congress wrote Obama on Tuesday.

A few dozen lawmakers are briefed on the CIA's covert action and clandestine military activity, and some may ask to review drone strike video and be granted access to after-action reports on strikes and other clandestine actions. But until two months ago, the administration had not formally confirmed in public its use of armed drones.

In an April speech in Washington, Obama's counterterrorism chief, John Brennan, acknowledged that despite presidential assurances of a judicious use of force against terrorists, some still question the legality of drone strikes.

"So let me say it as simply as I can: Yes, in full accordance with the law ? and in order to prevent terrorist attacks on the United States and to save American lives ? the United States government conducts targeted strikes against specific al-Qaida terrorists, sometimes using remotely piloted aircraft, often referred to publicly as drones," he said.

President George W. Bush authorized drone strikes in Pakistan and elsewhere, but Obama has vastly increased the numbers. According to Bill Roggio of The Long War Journal, an online publication that tracks U.S. counterterrorism operations, the U.S. under Obama has carried out an estimated 254 drone strikes in Pakistan alone. That compares with 47 strikes during the Bush administration.

In at least one case the target was an American. Anwar al-Awlaki, an al-Qaida leader, was killed in a U.S. drone strike in Yemen in September.

According to a White House list released late last year, U.S. counterterrorism operations have removed more than 30 terrorist leaders around the globe. They include al-Qaida in East Africa "planner" Saleh Ali Saleh Nabhan, who was killed in a helicopter strike in Somalia.

The drone campaign is highly unpopular overseas.

A Pew Research Center survey on the U.S. image abroad found that in 17 of 21 countries surveyed, more than half of the people disapproved of U.S. drone attacks targeting extremist leaders in such places as Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia. In the U.S., 62 percent approved of the drone campaign, making American public opinion the clear exception.

The U.S. use of cyberweapons, like viruses that sabotage computer networks or other high-tech tools that can invade computers and steal data, is even more closely shielded by official secrecy and, arguably, less well understood.

Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., has been a leading critic of the administration's handling of information about using computers as a tool of war.

"I think that cyberattacks are one of the greatest threats that we face," McCain said in a recent interview, "and we have a very divided and not very well-informed Congress addressing it."

Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and national security officials often talk publicly about improving U.S. defenses against cyberattack, not only on U.S. government computer systems but also against defense contractors and other private networks linked, for example, to the U.S. financial system or electrical grid. Left largely unexplained is the U.S. capacity to use computer viruses and other cyberweapons against foreign targets.

In the view of some, the White House has cut Congress out of the loop, even in the realm of overt warfare.

Sen. James Webb, D-Va., who saw combat in Vietnam as a Marine, introduced legislation last month that would require that the president seek congressional approval before committing U.S. forces in civil conflicts, such as last year's armed intervention in Libya, in which there is no imminent security threat to the U.S.

"Year by year, skirmish by skirmish, the role of the Congress in determining where the U.S. military would operate, and when the awesome power of our weapon systems would be unleashed has diminished," Webb said.

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Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Judge sets hearing on CBS bid to block ABC series

This June 2012 photo released by ABC shows a sitting area for "The Glass House," an interactive real-time reality competition, where 14 contestants will live and compete for a quarter million dollars. The series, which relies on audience participation, premieres Monday, June 18, on ABC. CBS is asking a federal judge to block the ABC series because they claim it closely copies ?Big Brother? and is using secrets that former staffers gleaned from the longtime reality competition show. A federal judge has set a hearing on CBS? motion for Friday, June 15 in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/ABC, Nicole Wilder)

This June 2012 photo released by ABC shows a sitting area for "The Glass House," an interactive real-time reality competition, where 14 contestants will live and compete for a quarter million dollars. The series, which relies on audience participation, premieres Monday, June 18, on ABC. CBS is asking a federal judge to block the ABC series because they claim it closely copies ?Big Brother? and is using secrets that former staffers gleaned from the longtime reality competition show. A federal judge has set a hearing on CBS? motion for Friday, June 15 in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/ABC, Nicole Wilder)

This June 2012 photo released by ABC shows a sitting area for "The Glass House," an interactive real-time reality competition, where 14 contestants will live and compete for a quarter million dollars. The series, which relies on audience participation, premieres Monday, June 18, on ABC. CBS is asking a federal judge to block the ABC series because they claim it closely copies ?Big Brother? and is using secrets that former staffers gleaned from the longtime reality competition show. A federal judge has set a hearing on CBS? motion for Friday, June 15 in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/ABC, Nicole Wilder)

This June 2012 photo released by ABC shows a sitting area for "The Glass House," an interactive real-time reality competition, where 14 contestants will live and compete for a quarter million dollars. The series, which relies on audience participation, premieres Monday, June 18, on ABC. CBS is asking a federal judge to block the ABC series because they claim it closely copies ?Big Brother? and is using secrets that former staffers gleaned from the longtime reality competition show. A federal judge has set a hearing on CBS? motion for Friday, June 15 in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/ABC, Nicole Wilder)

(AP) ? A federal judge has set a hearing on a motion by CBS to block the premiere of the upcoming ABC reality series "The Glass House" on the basis it copies elements and secrets from the long-running show "Big Brother.

U.S. District Judge Gary Feess scheduled arguments for Friday morning, just days before "Glass House" is scheduled to premiere on Monday night.

CBS wants the show knocked from airwaves because it claims the new series violates "Big Brother" copyrights and several of its former staffers now working with ABC have violated non-disclosure agreements.

Both shows will feature contestants who are constantly filmed, although ABC claims its series greatly emphasizes audience participation and popularity to determine events on the show.

CBS claims Kenny Rosen, a former "Big Brother" producer who's now one of the top producers on "Glass House," has acknowledged that he instructed a staffer to copy an important manual used on the CBS show.

ABC has denied wrongdoing and urged Feess to reject the motion. In a filing earlier this week, it said many of the elements that CBS seeks to protect are common to many reality shows and are not protectable by copyright law. The network has spent $16 million promoting "Glass House" and claims nearly 150 workers would lose their jobs if the court blocks it from airing.

Associated Press

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Tuesday, June 12, 2012

3-D maps, voice-based turn-by-turn navigation comes to Apple iOS

11 hrs.

Apple unveiled its own turn-by-turn navigation, with virtual voice assistant Siri giving the directions, and 3-D views as part of the upgrades in its iOS 6 mobile operating system announced Monday.

The company's own mapping application had been expected as a way for it to challenge Google Maps, considered by many to be one of the most important apps on the iPhone. ?In Apple's ongoing war with Google, Google Maps may soon be a distant memory, especially once iOS 6 comes out this fall.

"In iOS 6, we have built an entire new mapping solution from the ground up, and it is beautiful," said Apple senior vice president Scott Forstall.

All Apple's new worldwide?maps are vector-based; you can zoom in and out, rotate, see buildings in 3-D appear and disappear as part of what's being called the "Flyover" feature.

Noted Brian Barrett, Gizmodo editor, as he blogged?during Apple's presentation at the Worldwide Developers Conference in San Francisco: "This is the part of the demo where everyone on Google's geo team breaks out the Pepcid."

Traffic will be?monitored in real?time, with your estimated time of arrival?updated dynamically. If there's major?construction work or an accident on the freeway, and you need to be re-routed, you'll get a pop-up notification on your iOS device about that.?

The new Maps app "turn-by-turn navigation guides you to your destination with spoken directions, and the amazing Flyover feature has photo-realistic interactive 3-D views," Apple said in a news release.

The company's local search ? can you hear them now, Google? ?? includes information for more than 100 million businesses with "info cards that offer Yelp ratings, reviews, available deals and photos," the company said.

Apple has spent years "preparing to take mapping back," as Reuters noted recently.

The company is using technology from companies it has acquired specifically for that purpose, including 3-D mapping company C3 Technologies.

Last week, anticipating Apple's likely announcement, Google showed off its mapping capabilities that include soon-to-be-launched 3-D features.

Siri gets a step-up in her duties, and will be the voice users hear when getting guided directions.

"You can just ask Siri to take you somewhere, and you're on your way," said Forstall during Monday's presentation.

You'll also be able to ask Siri, as you're driving,?where the nearest places are to get fuel.?

Check out Technolog, Gadgetbox, Digital Life and In-Game on?Facebook,?and on Twitter, follow Suzanne Choney.

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Why You Should Refinance Your Mortgage

Mortgage refinancing is a common financial process where a borrower allows a new lender to buy out an existing mortgage in exchange for a new mortgage with altered terms. Refinancing can be a costly process due to a variety of fees like legal fees and home appraisal fees. There are, however, several circumstances where refinancing can be beneficial despite the cost.

This entry was posted by admin on June 10, 2012 at 9:49pm. It is filed under Real Estate.

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Sunday, June 10, 2012

Nike Golf signs Cheyenne Woods; she?s Tiger Woods? niece

Nike Golf is keep?ing things in the fam?ily ? the Woods fam?ily. The com?pany has signed Cheyenne Woods to a multi-year, equip?ment and apparel deal. Cheyenne Woods is Tiger Woods? niece. She?s mak?ing her pro?fes?sional debut at this week?s Wegman?s LPGA Championship.

Cheyenne Woods

Just in case you think this is a mat?ter of appeas?ing Eldrick, think again. Cheyenne Woods, who shot an open?ing round 75 yes?ter?day at the LPGA Cham?pi?onship, is a two-time col?lege All-America at Wake For?est Uni?ver?sity and the 2011 ACC women?s golf champion.

In her senior year, Woods fin?ished with the low?est single-season scor?ing aver?age in school his?tory at 73.47. She is one of three play?ers in school-history to post three under-par rounds at the same tour?na?ment and had the third-most rounds (36) at par or bet?ter in school-history.?

Woods has qual?i?fied for the U.S. Women?s Open in July and will par?tic?i?pate in LPGA Q-School later this?year.

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Friday, June 8, 2012

Central Asia group admits Afghanistan as observer

Chinese President Hu Jintao, right, shakes hands with Russian President Vladimir Putin at the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) summit in the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China Thursday, June 7, 2012. (AP Photo/Mark Ralston, Pool)

Chinese President Hu Jintao, right, shakes hands with Russian President Vladimir Putin at the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) summit in the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China Thursday, June 7, 2012. (AP Photo/Mark Ralston, Pool)

From left to right: Russian President Vladimir Putin, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Chinese President Hu Jintao, Kazakhstan's President Nursultan Nazarbayev and Afghanistan President Hamid Karzai walk away after a family photo session at the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) summit in the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China Thursday, June 7, 2012. (AP Photo/Mark Ralston, Pool)

Chinese President Hu Jintao, center, chairs the closing session of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) summit in the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China Thursday, June 7, 2012. (AP Photo/Mark Ralston, Pool)

Chinese President Hu Jintao, center, chairs the closing session of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) summit in the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China Thursday, June 7, 2012. (AP Photo/Mark Ralston, Pool)

Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari, left, poses with Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, center, and Afghanistan President Hamid Karzai at the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) summit in the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China Thursday, June 7, 2012. (AP Photo/Mark Ralston, Pool)

(AP) ? China, Russia and four Central Asian states granted Afghanistan observer status in their regional grouping on Thursday, moving to boost their influence with the impoverished, war-torn nation ahead of the withdrawal of most foreign combat troops by the end of 2014.

Chinese President Hu Jintao announced the plan at the Shanghai Cooperation Organization's annual summit in Beijing.

Russia and China have long seen the six-nation group as a way to counter U.S. influence in Central Asia, and hope to play a significant role in Afghanistan's future development, especially in economic reconstruction. Granting Afghanistan observer status will strengthen their contacts, something Beijing and Moscow hope will dilute U.S. influence and more closely align Kabul's policies with their own aims.

The SCO also recommitted itself to closer security and economic ties and to combating drug trafficking, extremism and terrorism.

"All the member states should implement the agreement on striking the three forces of terrorism, separatism and extremism," Hu told other leaders at a morning session. "We should establish and improve a system of cooperation in security and take coordinative actions to narrow the space of activities of the three forces, get rid of drug deals and other organized cross-border criminal activities."

Afghanistan, whose president, Hamid Karzai, attended the summit, joins India, Iran, Mongolia and Pakistan as SCO observer states. The group also admitted Turkey as one of its three dialogue partners.

Underscoring China's growing economic dominance in Central Asia, Hu opened the summit by saying China would offer a $10 billion loan to support economic development and cooperation among SCO member states. No details were immediately given on how the money would be used.

Despite the warming political ties, the SCO has yet to declare a unified strategy on Afghanistan and shows little sign of filling the void left by the withdrawal of U.S. and other foreign forces.

Already, Russia and fellow SCO member nations Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan are doing their part to ensure an orderly NATO withdrawal from Afghanistan, having agreed to allow the reverse transport of alliance equipment after Pakistan shut down southern supply routes six months ago.

The fourth Central Asian member of the SCO is Tajikistan.

The NATO pullout will also prompt the end of military operations out of Kyrgyzstan's Manas air base, fulfilling China and Russia's oft-stated opposition to a permanent U.S. presence in Central Asia.

While the SCO's security plans in Afghanistan remain unclear, economic outreach looks set to lead the way.

Firms from China ? the world's second-largest economy which shares a small stretch of border with Afghanistan ? have already moved into Afghanistan, which is hoping exploitation of its vast untapped mineral deposits will help offset the loss of revenue when foreign aid and spending drop with the withdrawal of international combat troops.

The U.S. Defense Department has estimated the value of Afghanistan's mineral reserves at $1 trillion. Other estimates have pegged it at $3 trillion or more.

In December, China's state-owned National Petroleum Corp. signed a deal allowing it to become the first foreign company to exploit Afghanistan's oil and natural gas reserves. That comes three years after the China Metallurgical Construction Co. signed a contract to develop the Aynak copper mine in Logar province. Beijing's $3.5 billion stake in the mine is the largest foreign investment in Afghanistan.

China's government has also contributed substantial aid to Afghanistan over the past decade in the form of training and equipment for some security units and government offices, infrastructure investment, and scholarships for Afghan students.

Russia, which lost nearly 15,000 troops in its disastrous 1979-1989 invasion and occupation of Afghanistan, appears keen to recover some of its lost influence there. A key concern for Moscow is stemming the flow of heroin into Russia, to be met by increased intelligence work in the country and bolstered border security in surrounding states.

Moscow also has offered generous assistance to rehabilitate Soviet-era dams and power stations and is exploring natural gas exploitation and infrastructure contracts ? putting it on a potential collision course with China.

Associated Press

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Thursday, June 7, 2012

Records search may delay WikiLeaks court-martial

(AP) ? An exhaustive search for government records assessing the impact of the WikiLeaks disclosures could delay the court-martial of the Army private charged with causing the biggest intelligence leak in U.S. history, a military judge said Wednesday.

With the defense accusing prosecutors of sitting on evidence potentially favorable to Pfc. Bradley Manning, the judge indicated she would consider his lawyers' request for a stay of proceedings. The trial is set to begin Sept. 21.

"The court is certainly willing to entertain any good-cause motions for continuance," Col. Denise Lind said from the bench during a pretrial hearing at Fort Meade that is scheduled to continue through Friday.

Lind didn't say when she would rule on the defense motion.

Manning, a 24-year-old Crescent, Okla., native, is charged with knowingly aiding al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula by allegedly causing hundreds of thousands of classified war logs, video clips and diplomatic cables to be published on the secret-sharing website WikiLeaks. Authorities say he downloaded the files from a Defense Department network while working as an intelligence analyst in Baghdad in 2009 and 2010.

Manning's lawyers are seeking dismissal of 10 of the 22 charges he faces.

Wednesday's debate focused in part on an FBI "impact assessment" that prosecutors first mentioned in a May 31 court filing. Lead Prosecutor Maj. Ashden Fein said prosecutors have already given the defense nearly 9,000 pages of FBI investigative records and a draft State Department assessment of the effects of the WikiLeaks disclosures on U.S. foreign relations.

Lind grilled lead prosecutor Maj. Ashden Fein most of the afternoon about whether his team is meeting its obligation to disclose any evidence it uncovers that could aid in the preparation of Manning's defense.

Defense attorneys have been battling for months for access to hundreds of thousands of pages of evidence that they say could help Manning's side. They say the documents they have been given by prosecutors are sometimes heavily redacted and virtually useless.

Lind didn't buy Fein's argument that with nearly 450,000 pages of such records already in their possession, Manning's lawyers are trying to delay the trial by making overly broad requests for documents. She questioned Fein sternly about how he would handle any defense-friendly information in some Defense Intelligence Agency records prosecutors are reviewing.

"Is the government going to look at this with an eye to the defense counsel?" she asked.

"We absolutely will, your honor," Fein replied.

"Are you going to hold onto it until they request it?"

"No, your honor, we will not," Fein said.

The defense is also seeking records from the CIA, the Justice Department, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence and several other civilian and military agencies. Lead defense attorney David Coombs maintains that the classified damage assessments probably concluded the leaks attributed to Manning did little damage to national security or U.S. interests.

None of damage assessments has been publicly released.

The material Manning is suspected of leaking includes hundreds of thousands of sensitive reports on foreign governments and leaders, Iraq and Afghanistan war logs and a 2007 video clip of a U.S. helicopter crew gunning down 11 men later found to include a Reuters news photographer and his driver. As for the video clip, the Pentagon concluded the troops acted appropriately, having mistaken the camera equipment for weapons.

The U.S. government claimed the disclosures endangered lives and security. Manning supporters say the leaks exposed war crimes and triggered pro-democracy uprisings in the Middle East.

Associated Press

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CivicInfo BC Careers - Computer Programmer - City of Chilliwack

Title:Computer Programmer - City of Chilliwack
Organization:City of Chilliwack
This union position, reporting to the Supervisor of the Geographic Information Services (GIS) section, will be responsible for the maintenance of the GIS website and all facets of computer programming, including studying new innovations in programming techniques and keeping informed of advances in computer technology and equipment; assisting in systems modifications and in the design of new systems; operating computers as required.

You are familiar with designing web-based applications using development tools such as Microsoft.NET framework, Microsoft Visual Studio and ColdFusion & ASP. You will demonstrate proficiency with either Microsoft SQL and/or Oracle. Familiarity with ArcGIS, Python and the ability to develop complex spatial & textual database queries and procedures in response to informational requirements of users would be an asset. You must be able to communicate effectively, both in oral and written format and be able to prepare technical and non-technical reports.

The incumbent will be trained to provide GIS technical support as necessary and will be expected to perform these duties as required.

Education:

Must have a diploma in information systems or related discipline from a recognized post-secondary institute plus have sound related experience.

Skills & Abilities:

  • Familiarity with the basics of computing science including computer architecture, time sharing operating system functions, file structures and one or more programming languages.
  • Knowledge of the applicable coding and software necessary for programming instructions for electronic computers and related equipment;
  • Knowledge of the operating characteristics, capabilities and limitations of electronic computers and related equipment;
  • Able to communicate effectively, both in oral and written format and able to prepare technical and non-technical reports;
  • Able to be polite, tactful and courteous in dealing with the public;
  • Able to establish and maintain an effective working relationship with department officials and other members of staff.
We offer a very competitive salary and benefits package, as well as a great work environment that prides itself on employee satisfaction.? Please submit your cover letter, resume, and application form (.pdf or .doc) by Tuesday, June 19, 2012 quoting Competition Number 2012-46 to:?
Location:Chilliwack
Date Posted:Tuesday, June 05, 2012 at 11:38:29 AM
Posting?Expires:Tuesday, June 19, 2012 at 4:30:00 PM

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