Director Rupert Sanders on Snow White and the Huntsman and Kristen Stewart

Rupert Sanders, Charlize Theron and Kristen StewartIt wouldn’t have been right to have his armor-wearing Snow White say “Is that, like, my castle?” in a casual So California voice, so Kristen Stewart had to learn to handle a British accent in Snow White and the Huntsman. Stewart, best known for playing Bella Swan in Twilight, also had to learn how to handle a sword (but not too expertly as she’s not playing a trained fighter) and overcome her fear of horseback riding. And Sanders told us at this weekend’s WonderCon that he was impressed with her ability to transform into the role.

Sanders also talked about the Snow White story, the dark tone, Charlize Theron as the Evil Queen, having eight dwarfs instead of seven, and how all the characters are dealing with, or are motivated by, loss:

Read the full interview: Director Rupert Sanders Snow White and the Huntsman interview

More on Snow White and the Huntsman:

(Photo © Richard Chavez)

Source: http://movies.about.com/b/2012/03/18/rupert-sanders-snow-white-huntsman-kristen-stewart.htm

THERE IS SO MUCH WORLD TO SEE LSI TOTAL SYSTEM SERVICES John Surtees Cyril Abidi 

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off

Student Center Hours of Operation – Spring Break

SPRING BREAK SCHEDULE

Thursday, March 15, 2012

Student Center 7:00 AM – 11:00 PM

CCSU Bookstore 9:00 AM – 7:00 PM

SC Breakers Game Room 10:00 AM – 10:00 PM

 

Friday, March 16, 2012

Student Center will close at 5:00 PM

Devil’s Den Food Court 7:30 AM – 2:00 PM

Breakers will close at 5:00 PM for Spring Break

CCSU Bookstore Closed for Inventory

 

Saturday, March 17 – Sunday, March 18, 2012

-C-L-O-S-E-D-

 

Monday, March 19 – Friday, March 23, 2012

Student Center   8:00 AM – 5:00 PM

Card Office         9:00 AM – 4:00 PM

CCSU Bookstore 9:00 AM – 3:00 PM

Devil’s Den Food Court – CLOSED

 

Saturday, March 24 – Sunday, March 25, 2012

-C-L-O-S-E-D-

 

Monday, March 26, 2012

Student Center opens at 7:00 am and services resume regular semester hours.

 

During Spring Break week, the Student Center will be open
Monday through Friday, 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM except for special uses as requested at least six weeks in advance.

 

HAVE A SAFE AND ENJOYABLE SPRING BREAK!!!

Source: http://www.ccsu.edu/page.cfm?p=3506&newsid=1965

Werner Bergold APPLIED MATERIALS Norman Blemings SPSS WESTERN DIGITAL SONUS NETWORKS

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off

McLaren unveil new car for 2012

At McLaren Technology Centre, Woking

Lewis Hamilton and Jenson Button sat on the stage in front of the car they both hope will take them to the world title this year looking relaxed and happy.

Yet in their responses to apparently innocuous questions, both men revealed much about the different ways in which they approach the 2012 Formula 1 season.

They were asked how they had spent the winter. Button, fresh from arguably his best season yet in the sport, had spent some time in Hawaii. “Somewhere warm to chill out and train,” he said, “but it’s always the same – you spend a couple of weeks away and you are missing racing, so I was back on 5 January”.

Hamilton’s 2011, meanwhile, was self-admittedly his worst season yet in F1, with three superb wins interspersed with errors and controversy.

McLaren

McLaren are set to compete for the title with their new car which was unveiled ahead of the beginning of the Formula One season due to start in March. Photo: Getty

His response to the same question was enlightening.”The opposite of Jenson,” he said. “I was over in the cold in the mountains in Colorado. I wasn’t missing the car too much – it was nice to be away from it awhile, to refresh, start anew, and just getting back to training was great.

“I altered it a little bit this year, I think last year I was training too much. I had a good break and I was grateful to Martin (Whitmarsh, the McLaren team principal) for giving me such a good break.”

Later, Hamilton revealed a little more about his desire to make amends for 2011 with a sparkling 2012.

Which race are you most looking forward to, he was asked. “Monaco is the one for me – I want to get back there and have a better race [in which he collided with two drivers and caused a storm with his post-race comments] than last year.”

It was a stark illustration of just how much is at stake in 2012 for the man who many still regard as the most naturally talented and out-and-out fastest racing driver in the world.

Whether Hamilton has found the mental equilibrium he desires to enable him to perform consistently at his brilliant best remains to be seen, starting with the first race in Melbourne, Australia, on 18 March.

But much of it may depend on the reason he and Button were up on that stage – the McLaren MP4-27.
His team’s failure – for the third year running – to produce a car with which he could consistently challenge at the front was one of the main causes for Hamilton’s frustrations last year.

He knows exactly how good he is, so it was galling for him to see yet again that he was not realistically going to challenge for the championship.

As is the way of things, the launch of the new McLaren shed no light whatsoever on whether that will change in 2012.

The car looks nice enough – and it mercifully lacks the “platypus” front seen on the Caterham, the only other new car to break cover so far this year, as a response to new rules lowering the height of the nose.

In order to see this content you need to have both Javascript enabled and Flash Installed. Visit BBC Webwise for full instructions. If you’re reading via RSS, you’ll need to visit the blog to access this content.

There was a lot of talk about McLaren's focus on the aerodynamics at the rear of the car, which featured noticeably tighter packaging than last year, and particularly of the need to make the most of pre-season testing and start the season strongly.

That was where McLaren's campaign began to unravel last season - an over-complex exhaust system led to a terrible pre-season with a car Whitmarsh has described as "neither reliable nor quick".

This year's car contains no obvious stand-out innovations but the team were quick to deny suggestions that McLaren had reined themselves in an attempt to make sure the car runs in testing, which Whitmarsh described as "data-gathering".

Engineering director Tim Goss described the MP4-27 as "a complete re-work from nose to tail".

Technical director Paddy Lowe added: "The regulations are trimming us into narrower and narrower boxes so we don't see the big radical changes from one year to the next, so the car looks quite similar.

But there is a great deal of change underneath.

"There still are obvious innovations. We have done a lot of work around the back end, a lot more tidy packaging there. We have had to respond to the change in the exhaust regulations (banning the blowing of exhausts along the rear floor to boost downforce).

That's given the aerodynamicists a big challenge to come up with the (lost) downforce and the balance."

Lowe and Goss are old hands and they did a great job of straight-batting the questions on the stand-out features of the car and it was left to Whitmarsh to utter F1's dreaded c-word.

"I don't believe we've been inherently conservative," he said. "We've set ourselves some tough targets, targets that we think if we achieve them we will win the world championship. I think we will meet those targets, and if they are the right targets, we will win the championships."

To achieve that obvious aim, though, there is the small matter of having to beat the twin formidable forces of Ferrari and Fernando Alonso and, the combination expected to remain the one to beat, Red Bull and Sebastian Vettel.

Just as the car's tight rear takes more than a small bow towards the all-conquering Red Bulls of the last two seasons, it is clear that McLaren have had their eyes on other aspects of their rivals' dominance as well.

"It didn't go unnoticed that Sebastian Vettel put the car on pole a lot and then pulled the gap (from which he controlled the race)," said Goss. "We're aware of it; we've attempted to find ways to deal with it."

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/andrewbenson/2012/02/at_mclaren_technology_centre_w.html

QUANTA COMPUTER Patrick Speight Dempsey Wilson Domenico Schiattarella Eddie Sachs

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off

New iPad vs iPad 2: Retina display tests

iPad vs iPad 2: Retina display tests

The new iPad sports a 9.7-inch, 2048×1536, 264ppi Retina display, which is twice as dense as the iPad 2?s equal sized, 1024×1536, 132ppi screen but packs four (4) times as many pixels into the same space. That?s exactly what it sounds like ? the new iPad has 4 pixels in the same space the iPad 2 had a 1 pixel.

Icon on an iPad 2 display

Icon on an iPad 2 display

Icon on a new iPad Retina display

Icon on a new iPad Retina display

Theoretically, that means the pixels on the new iPad display are so small they?re difficult if not impossible to discern with the naked eye during general use. Hence the marketing name ?Retina?. It?s roughly the same effect as when you compare cheap newspaper or old comic print next to a high end glossy magazine. The information becomes so densely packed that the mechanics disappear and only the content remains. Everything looks sharper, crisper, more solid, and more real. If you?re not a trained typographer, photographer, or designer, it?s still something your eyes and brains will appreciate even if you can?t articulate it.

Instapaper text on an iPad 2 display

Instapaper text on an iPad 2 display

Instapaper text on a new iPad Retina display

Instapaper text on a new iPad Retina display

The original iPad was amazing when it first launched. I called it the iPhone on IMAX and that?s exactly what it felt like. The iPhone?s then 480×320 screen just seemed small and cramped by comparison. But then Apple introduced the iPhone 4 and the 960×640 Retina display and everything changed. Suddenly small was sharp and cramped was clear, and while the iPad and even the iPad 2 was still bigger, the display wasn?t better. It was quantity but not quality. Seeing and reading and watching on the iPhone was harder but suddenly more relaxing and enjoyable.

Safari text on an iPad 2 screen

Safari text on an iPad 2 screen

Safari text on an new iPad Retina display

Safari text on an new iPad Retina display

Some people have used the metaphor of putting on glasses ? of the Retina screen being so good it?s like they can focus for the first time. That?s not entirely it though. I have a feeling the Retina display goes deeper than that. It?s good enough your brain no longer has to work at filling in details anymore and it can just relax and enjoy. It can just see and read and watch.

Now the iPad has it as well. Once again it?s bigger and better. It?s not small but it is sharp, not cramped but it is clear.

iBooks text on an iPad 2 display

iBooks text on an iPad 2 display

iBooks text on a new iPad Retina display

iBooks text on a new iPad Retina display

For me, it will be hard if not uncomfortable to go back. It will be rough and bumpy and almost clumsy. And given how good the iPad 2 display is, that?s a hell of a thing to say. (I?m typing this on a MacBook Air, which has a fairly dense display in its own right, and now I find myself acutely and annoyingly aware of the sub-pixel anti-aliasing.)

The difference between the new iPad and the iPad 2?s display isn?t as much as an old Standard Definition (SD) TV and a 1080p High Definition (HD) display, because for most people that involved the simultaneously jump from CRT tubes to LCD or Plasma flat panels. But it?s more than the jump from 720p to 1080p display. It?s like going from iTunes SD movies to iTunes HD movies. Everything is smoother but more textured, cleaner but more detailed.

I remember watching Lord of the Rings in HD for the first time, amazed at how much more there was to see. That?s the same feeling I have with the new iPad, watching the Avengers trailer in 1080p (in a window, since 1920×1080 doesn?t even fill the new iPad display).

iBooks image on an iPad 2 display

iBooks image on an iPad 2 display

iBooks image on a new iPad Retina display

iBooks image on a new iPad Retina display

It?s not the Martix?s ?welcome to the real world? or even Vader?s ?with my own eyes?, but for anyone who cares about image quality, typography, iconography, art, or HD video, it?s very much in that geeky vein.

Since it?s harder to show the difference than it is to just write about it, I put a macro lens on my iPhone 4S and took some close up images to try an highlight just what that many pixels look like. Holding the new iPad at a distance, you don?t see the pixels, of course. You just see the content. That?s the whole point.

Apple has made the best panel I?ve ever seen, and while not everyone will appreciate it, or even care about it, that takes nothing away from the achievement.

I?ve jotted down some more thoughts in the new iPad forum, so jump in there and let me know what your experience has been with the Retina display.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/Epg50P9jAfs/story01.htm

MCAFEE NEVER BEEN TO SPAIN OLD SHEP Lloyd Ruby I M GONNA WALK DEM GOLDEN STAIRS TERADATA Monet Mazur Kevin Conway William Ashton Lewis Jr

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off

GeChic On-Lap 1302 is a ‘Secret Tool’ to give your smartphone dual screens (video)

GeChic On-Lap 1302 is a 'Secret Tool' to give your smartphone dual screens (video)

If you’ve ever felt the burning urge to mirror your smartphone’s display onto a larger screen, then you might consider stuffing GeChic’s portable, 13.3-inch monitor into the ol’ man purse for your next wayward outing. We’re not promising that it’ll be simple, but in addition to supporting laptops, game consoles and digital cameras, you can also rig up your smartphone to the On-Lap 1302 monitor — with the assistance of a tangle of adapters, batteries and cords, that is. The product is said to be just 8mm thick, but most importantly, this 1366 x 768 display can be powered either from your laptop’s USB port or an external battery pack. It includes proper hookups for VGA and HDMI video connections (via a proprietary 30-pin connector), but laptop users may also purchase a Mini DisplayPort accessory. Throw in Apple’s Digital AV Adapter or an MHL to HDMI solution, and boom, you’ve also got support for your iPhone and many Android smartphones. Okay, so it’s a bit convoluted, but the product’s video touts this as, “The best idea ever,” and along with its homespun production, we think you’ll enjoy it for a good laugh — so just hop the break. Those interested in such gear will find it on Newegg next month for $199.

Continue reading GeChic On-Lap 1302 is a ‘Secret Tool’ to give your smartphone dual screens (video)

GeChic On-Lap 1302 is a ‘Secret Tool’ to give your smartphone dual screens (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 17 Mar 2012 03:24:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceGeChic, Newegg  | Email this | Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/03/17/gechic-on-lap-1302-portable-monitor-video/

Zaxby s Chevrolet Henri Pescarolo Sherman Pendergarst elvis presley in the ghetto QLOGIC Bob Christie

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off

Bellator fighter off Friday?s card, wanted by police

Eric Oria was supposed to show up at Bellator’s weigh-ins on Thursday to officially weigh in for his first professional fight in Hammond, Ind. Instead, the Indiana State Police showed, looking to take Oria into custody.

The Northwest Indiana Times reported Oria missed Thursday’s weigh-ins. Bellator CEO Bjorn Rebney said Oria scratched from the card before weigh-ins because of “physical problems.”

Oria had an outstanding warrant on a charge of criminal recklessness. He was scheduled to fight Lance Surma on the show’s undercard. After two amateur fights in Hammond, he was set to make his pro debut in the same town as his other fights.

In an interview with the Times earlier in the week, he said the fight was “on the highlights of his life.” According to MMA Recap, the fight was pulled because it was too late to find a replacement for Oria.

Oria’s no-show was not the only shake-up to Friday’s card. The featherweight tournament was shook up as Genair da Silva did not make weight and was replaced by Kenny Foster. Foster will now take on “PoPo” Bezerra.

Other popular content on the Yahoo! network:
? Ranking the MMA weight classes
? Peyton Manning leaves huge tip ? and waiter gets fired
? Shine: Three-year-old forgotten at Chuck E. Cheese’s

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/bellator-fighter-off-friday-card-wanted-police-045312605.html

Emmanuelle Chriqui Romolo Balbi Julien Allemand Laura Prepon Colin Edwards Jean Michel Bayle

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off

How would you change the Nook Tablet?

It’s hard not to make a series of reductive comparisons between the Nook Tablet and the Kindle Fire. After all, it’s the conflict between Barnes & Noble and Amazon that frames these two 7-inch tablet / e-reader hybrids. This one is $50 more expensive, but is technically more impressive: you get more expandability, it’s faster and the screen is better for images and video. Statistically, at least three out of every ten e-book readers purchased were Nooks, so plenty of you out there use ‘em. What we want to know, is what are they like to use on a daily basis? What little gripes did we not pick up during our week-long review and, if William Lynch was reading what you had to say, what would you change?

How would you change the Nook Tablet? originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 18 Mar 2012 22:25:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/03/18/how-would-you-change-the-nook-tablet/

Maurice Mo Smith MY BABE Kenny Wallace DOIN THE BEST I CAN QUANTA COMPUTER

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off

New F1 season could prove unpredictable

The Formula 1 teams arrived in Melbourne’s Albert Park to be greeted by grey skies, intermittent rain and blustery wind. But not even the weather could dampen the palpable excitement and nervous tension.

The start of the new season is just a few hours away and everyone from world champions Red Bull to lowly HRT is desperate to find the answer to the question they have been asking all winter. Where will they be come Saturday and Sunday afternoons?

The F1 teams like to keep outsiders guessing before the first race by saying they don’t know where they are in terms of competitiveness, but usually this is little more than kidology.

Such is their capacity to analyse data with massive super-computers that usually they have a very good idea of their position in relation to their rivals, despite the well-known difficulty of predicting form from pre-season testing.

But this year seems different; they genuinely don’t seem to know – so the usual anticipation ahead of the first race of the season is magnified.

Lewis Hamilton said that judging by the data that mattered from winter testing he felt McLaren were “in the top three or four”.

Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso has also bigged up his team’s chances for the 2012 season. Photo: Getty

Meanwhile, a senior engineer from one of the teams who will be contesting what is expected to be a congested midfield battle told me he was pretty sure Red Bull and McLaren were out front but he didn’t know “whether we will be third or seventh”.

Some people’s anticipation is more nervous than others’, though.

For teams such as Mercedes and Lotus, there is a genuine sense that they have done a good job and moved forward over the winter.

In fact there is a growing sense in the paddock that Mercedes may even be able to give McLaren and Red Bull a run for their money, something team principal Ross Brawn was quick to dismiss as “unlikely”.

For others, the desire to discover the true pace of their car is tinged as much with trepidation as anticipation.

Ferrari have had what Fernando Alonso described here on Thursday as a “tough” winter, struggling with “quite a complex car in terms of set-up and understanding it”.

Alonso was doing his best to talk up the team’s chances, saying: “Maybe we didn’t reach our targets but it doesn’t mean that we are slower than the other cars. That we will not know until Saturday.”

Others are keen to play down the importance of this first race of the season.

Vettel said that Australia this weekend and Malaysia next would do no more than demonstrate a “trend” for performance over the season.

And Brawn said he “preferred to look at the first four races and the range of circuits we have and see how that looks”.

But the statistics belie that point of view.

Albert Park might be a unique street circuit, with a dusty, low-grip surface, and the teams may only just be beginning to work with their new cars. But actually it has proven to be a rather good arbiter of the season to come – five of the last six winners of the Australian Grand Prix have gone on to become world champion that year.

Other themes are also emerging this weekend that will have importance to one degree or another as the season develops.

F1 wouldn’t be F1 without a good technical conspiracy and this year looks like being no different.

Already during pre-season testing there have been eyebrows raised at the way some teams are trying to exploit exhaust gases for aerodynamic effect.

This practice was supposed to have been ended by rule changes that have restricted the positioning and angle of the exhaust pipes and put much stricter limits on engine mapping – both an attempt to rid the sport of so-called exhaust-blown diffusers that became such important tools over the previous two seasons.

But this weekend another potential controversy has emerged over the rear wings on several cars, particularly the Mercedes, Red Bull and the Ferrari.

These new devices – that some believe to be on the fringes of legality – seem designed to exploit the DRS overtaking aid in ways not originally intended.

The DRS was designed as a tool to make overtaking less difficult – if a driver is within a one-second margin of a car he is trying to overtake, he can use the DRS in a specified zone on the track to give him a straight-line speed boost.

Mercedes, Red Bull and Ferrari, meanwhile, have what appear to be extra slots on the rear wing that can work in conjunction with the DRS to either increase straight-line speed even further, or allow the teams to run extra downforce with no drag penalty.

The most noticeable feature of the 2012 cars, though, remains the noses – and specifically the ugly ‘platypus’ step on all but the McLaren and Marussia.

This is a result of a rule that has lowered the nose tips of the cars to increase driver safety, but not lowered the top of the chassis.

The result is a grid full of ridiculous and ugly-looking cars, and very few are troubling to hide their frustration at the situation.

“It is unfortunate,” Brawn said, “and the teams should look at themselves and blame themselves.

“[Governing body] the FIA tried to do what they could and a number of teams wouldn’t agree to the changes because they said they wanted to carry over their chassis, which we all know is a load of nonsense because nobody has carried over their chassis.

“We’ve ended up with a very odd feature on the cars which is not very endearing and I’m sure will get fixed for 2013.”

The noses, of course, will soon be forgotten if the season is close and competitive. And that will only begin to become clear as this weekend unfolds.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/andrewbenson/2012/03/new_f1_season_could_prove_unpr.html

AUTODESK Jan Magnussen Alberto Rodriguez Larreta Wild In The Country Phil Hill Theo Fitzau JeanClaude Rudaz TRIMBLE NAVIGATION LIMITED elvis presley cd

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off

Romney: Get rid of energy officials

Mitt Romney speaks to Illinois voters at a pancake restaurant Friday in Rosemont, Illinois.
Mitt Romney speaks to Illinois voters at a pancake restaurant Friday in Rosemont, Illinois.

Washington (CNN) — Mitt Romney escalated Republican attacks on President Barack Obama’s energy policies Sunday, calling for the firing or resignations of what he labeled the “gas hike trio” of top energy and environment officials in the administration.

The Republican presidential hopeful’s remarks on “Fox News Sunday” illustrated a GOP strategy to target Obama for rising gas prices as part of a campaign narrative that depicts the president as stifling U.S. production in order to boost alternative energy sources.

On Sunday, the AAA reported that the national average price for a gallon of regular unleaded gasoline rose to $3.84 for an increase of almost 17% so far this year, according to www.fuelgaugereport.com.

Polls indicate Obama may be vulnerable on the issue, with his slowly rising approval rating in recent months appearing to stagnate or drop as gas prices have spiked.

Romney appeared eager to exploit the issue Sunday following similar comments he made the night before at a campaign event in Illinois, the next major primary in the Republican presidential race to decide who will run against Obama in November.

“There’s no question” that Obama is to blame for higher gas prices, Romney said on Fox, adding that the president wanted higher energy costs to help speed the transition from oil and other fossil fuels.

“He has selected three people to help him implement that program,” Romney said of Energy Secretary Steven Chu, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar and Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lisa Jackson, “and this gas hike trio has been doing the job over the last three and a half years, and gas prices are up.”

According to Romney, Obama had an “election-year conversion” and now advocates increased U.S. oil drilling as well as natural gas and coal energy development. Therefore, Romney said, the threesome of Chu, Salazar and Jackson “ought to be fired” or should “hand in their resignations.”

“It’s a very different policy that he’s now talking about, and I hope it’s a real conversion,” Romney said. “Time will tell.”

Obama contends that oil prices are set by a global market and there is little that any administration can do in the short term to prevent recurring price spikes, like what is happening now.

In recent weeks, the president has ridiculed Republican assertions that increased drilling could lower gas prices, saying such claims were either misinformed or deliberately misleading.

“That’s not oil talk. That’s snake oil talk, and the American people know the difference,” David Axelrod, Obama’s senior campaign adviser, told the CBS program “Face the Nation” on Sunday.

Axelrod said Obama advocates a broad energy policy that invests in clean energy alternatives while continuing oil, gas and nuclear development. When asked about Romney’s claim that Obama sought higher energy costs, Axelrod called it “nonsense,” noting that domestic production now was greater than any time in the last eight years.

However, Republicans including Romney and fellow presidential contender Newt Gingrich call for accelerated drilling and development of U.S. oil and natural gas reserves as a way to end U.S. dependence on foreign oil.

They criticize Obama for holding back domestic oil development and argue Obama’s policies have little to do with increased production happening now.

Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus told the CBS program that today’s increased domestic oil production was due to polices under the Clinton and George W. Bush administrations, rather than anything Obama has done.

“This president has shut down everything when it comes to energy independence in this country,” Priebus said.

Last week, Salazar pushed back hard against that argument, telling White House reporters that such attacks by Republicans were “simply wrong.”

“The fact of the matter is that we are producing more from public lands, both oil and gas, both onshore as well as offshore, than at any time in recent memory,” Salazar said. “And when you look back at the year of 2009, 2010, and 2011, we’ve continued to make millions and millions of acres of the public estate available both on the land, as well as on the sea.”

Even after the Gulf oil disaster, Salazar said, new permits have been issued for both deepwater and shallow water drilling and “more rigs working there than at any recent time in memory.”

At the same briefing, White House Press Secretary Jay Carney said that “if increasing drilling were the answer in the United States to lowering prices at the pump, we would be seeing lower prices at the pump, because under President Obama we have increased significantly domestic oil and gas production. That is a fact.”

In the Fox interview Sunday, Romney also criticized the Obama administration’s rejection of the Keystone XL oil pipeline from Canada’s tar sands development to the U.S. Gulf Coast.

Romney said the Keystone decision demonstrated bad policy by stifling job creation at the same time that the government was giving $500 million to Solyndra, the failed solar panel manufacturer.

However, Romney’s assertion misstated the timing of those events. The Solyndra loan occurred in 2009, during Obama’s first year in office, while the State Department rejected a permit for the Keystone pipeline earlier this year.

The Keystone permit was turned down after congressional Republicans forced a decision as planners continued seeking an alternate route through Nebraska requested by state officials.

TransCanada, the company developing the pipeline, has said it will reapply for approval of an alternate route, and in the meantime will construct one segment of the project from Oklahoma to the Gulf Coast that doesn’t require State Department approval.

Axelrod told CBS that Obama was “not hostile to transporting oil, but we have to do it in an appropriate way.”

Source: http://rss.cnn.com/~r/rss/cnn_topstories/~3/beJaHFKoqiw/index.html

Zaxby s Ford WRITE TO ME FROM NAPLES THERE IS SO MUCH WORLD TO SEE LSI TOTAL SYSTEM SERVICES

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off

Google Voice Search learns Latin American Spanish, Indonesian, and Malaysian

google voice search

Google Voice Search has just introduced localizations for Latin America, Indonesia and Malaysia, enabling native language search for hundreds of millions of users.

Google’s official blog post offers some interesting insights into the process of collecting and analyzing the speech data needed to expand support. Thousands of hours were spent gathering voice samples and choosing key regional accents to analyze, and International Program Manager Linne Ha is clearly very appreciative of the Google users who helped the company complete the expansion. Without an enthusiastic base of users to lend a hand, Google Voice Search’s polyglot powers would have been nearly impossible to deliver.

Google Voice Search learns Latin American Spanish, Indonesian, and Malaysian originally appeared on Download Squad on Thu, 31 Mar 2011 09:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Source: http://downloadsquad.switched.com/2011/03/31/google-voice-search-learns-latin-american-spanish-indonesian-a/

Maggie Grace Aric Almirola Amar Suloev David Purley Anthony Pettis Tricia Vessey

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off