Thursday, 8 November 2012

'Script to Screen' Series Set to Bring Hollywood Screenwriters to UCSB

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Christy Van Beek

Renowned Hollywood screenwriters will make appearances at University of California Santa Barbara this November as part of the Carsey-Wolf Center and Pollock Theater?s ?Script to Screen? event series. Tom Schulman, the Oscar-winning writer of ?Dead Poets Society,? and Kirsten Smith and Karen McCullah, who wrote ?10 Things I Hate About You,? will be headlining the events on Nov. 8 and Nov. 29, respectively. Both events will take place at Pollock Theater at 7 p.m.

The Carsey-Wolf Center and the department of Film and Media Studies present several events focusing on screenwriting each year as part of the ?Script to Screen? series. Introduced in 2011 by Matt Ryan and Joe Palladino, these events concentrate on the translation of screenplays to films, and offer students a chance to learn about how the scripts of many popular movies were successfully adapted by actors, directors and writers.

According to Ryan, the series works toward creating an event that students ?won?t get anywhere else? through exploring the inner workings of a screenplay alongside its creators. Because Pollock Theater accommodates an audience of only 300, students? questions are fielded directly and more personally than larger events.

The pair of events will include a screening of the films as well as a question and answer forum with the screenwriters, where students will have the opportunity to discuss how the decisions of the film?s creators and contributors affected the finished products. A costume contest and chance to win prizes will conclude the events. Past ?Script to Screen? events have included a screening of ?Back to the Future? and a Q&A with Christopher Lloyd, who played Dr. Emmett Brown in the film; another event featured an evening with the animator Don Hertzfeldt, a UCSB alumnus and producer of the Academy Award-nominated film ?Rejected.?

Ryan said that the last few events have featured scene readings taken from parts of the scripts, a portion of the events that the actors and writers especially enjoy and that students find notably interesting because it ?gives them a different view of how the screenwriter wrote the script.? For students interested in screenwriting who don?t know where to begin or how to write an engaging script, learning how familiar scripts were written ?makes the process seem less difficult,? and encourages them to keep writing.

The Carsey-Wolf Center holds many other events throughout the year, working in collaboration with several media initiatives to expand students? understanding and knowledge of various forms of media literacy. As one of many job opportunities for students available through the center, the Pollock Theater offers a unique internship for students interested in the production and direction of theater events. In addition to attending workshops, Pollock interns are given first-hand experience working on media events like the ?Script to Screen? series. Students interested in screenwriting or film studies benefit not only from the advice and perspective of writers who have translated their storytelling vision to Hollywood, but also from the opportunity to become a part of the expanding department of media studies. The interns produce and direct six ?Script to Screen? events each year, two per quarter, and work hard to find engaging films that will appeal to a wide audience. In the words of Ryan, ?the goal is to choose films that both students and the community will connect to,? but the interests of the students take center stage.

Considering that there is a limited number of opportunities to speak one-on-one with well-known screenwriters of popular and beloved films, it is arguable that the ?Script to Screen? events do nothing short of placing student interests at the forefront and in the limelight.

Photo Courtesy of the Carsey-Wolf Center

Source: http://thebottomline.as.ucsb.edu/2012/11/script-to-screen-series-set-to-bring-hollywood-screenwriters-to-ucsb

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Wednesday, 7 November 2012

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Free Classifieds Health & Fitness Fitness Equipment

Buying investment properties remains the best and quickest way to increase net worth and income yearly. However, the question that investors want answered is how to find lucrative investment properties in today?s market.

The task of choosing an investment property from among hundreds or thousands of offers is a daunting one indeed. Many investors are even more apprehensive when faced with stories of loss due to misrepresentation or fraud. What every investor needs is a reliable source of information and advice to rely upon while making this very important decision.

Buyers should also of course do their own research into the suitability and affordability of a certain piece of investment property. However, it would be very useful to rely on the expertise and experience of a company that would have consultation services. In this way, possible obstacles can be foreseen and a more comprehensive study can be made.

In choosing from the many companies claiming to help investors to locate and purchase the ideal investment property, buyers need to consider a lot the overall entity. A larger company with an extensive network may be able to offer more options to choose from.

Also, investment properties need to be studied in connection with the demographics of the area. Certain key points mark areas that are offer lucrative investment properties. First of all, the demand for real estate or housing should be greater than the existing supply. This forms the basic tenet for investment in order to realize income from the property immediately.

Another key point to consider would be the consistent and significant influx of population migration into that area. This way, even with additional supply of competing properties, the buyer is assured of a regular additional injection of demand from the immigrating people.

Employment opportunities in the area should also be above adequate. This means that the people who make up the demand have the opportunity and means to afford the housing and rent that the investment properties supply. A robust local economy will allow the renters also to provide more and more jobs to the people who continue to come in. This is directly related to the next key point which is income growth. The earning power of the people in the area should steadily increase with time, so as to allow rates for rent also to be increased.

Lastly, there should be a strong demand for properties for rent in the area. Although some areas may have a robust local economy and a steady migration of new people, if the demand for that area is for owned property alone, then rented properties may not be as lucrative.

As such, finding a lucrative investment in today?s market is attainable with a little research and certain factors in play. Buyers should thus remain optimistic that there are still many opportunities for profitable investment. A little homework and the help of a reputable real estate institution would be a move in the right direction.

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Metlife close to buying Constitution Center in Washington: WSJ

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Tuesday, 6 November 2012

Democrat wins bombastic Conn. Senate race

The Senate

Democrat Chris Murphy has won Connecticut's bombastic Senate race, defeating Republican and former WWE president Linda McMahon. Combined with her previous bid in 2010, McMahon has dropped $100 million of her own personal fortune to pursue a Senate seat.

Both CNN and Fox News have called Pennsylvania's race for Democrat Bob Casey over Republican Tom Smith.

Also, CNN is projecting Democrat Joe Donnelly to defeat Robert Mourdock in Indiana, while in Massachusetts, the rising Democratic star Elizabeth Warren appears to be ahead of incumbent Sen. Scott Brown.

Elsewhere, it's been a good night for Independents.? In Vermont, independent junior Senator Bernie Sanders has won re-election, while in Maine, former Governor Angus King has won the Senate seat of retiring GOP moderate Olympia Snowe.

Four other Democrats have also won re-election to the Senate: Bill Nelson in Florida, Sheldon Whitehouse in Rhode Island, Ben Cardin in Maryland and Tom Carper in Delaware. Meanwhile, in Tennessee, Republican Sen. Bob Corker held onto his seat.

The Senate races that remain toss-ups are in Massachusetts, Montana, Nevada, North Dakota, Virginia and Wisconsin.

Republicans need a major upset to take over the Senate, winning all the seats where they are favored, four of the toss-ups and, if President Obama wins reelection and prevents Paul Ryan from becoming President of the Senate, also one formerly Democratic seat.

Certain contests remain intensely close, including those in North Dakota, Wisconsin and Montana, where polls show only 1 percentage point--or an even narrower margin--between the candidates.

Virginia's race between former Gov. Tom Kaine and former Sen. George Allen is widely believed to follow the results of the presidential race: Whether the state swings toward Obama or Romney will likely decide whether Kaine or Allen is the state's next senator.

The House

CNN has projected that the House of Representatives will remain in Republican control.

In the House, with 435 districts, a few contests stand out: in Minnesota's 11th district, the former Republican presidential candidate Michele Bachmann is fighting an unexpectedly tough race against the Democratic challenger, Jim Graves.

In Utah's 4th district, Mia Love may become the first black, female Republican to serve in the House, if she wins the race against one of the last Blue Dog Democrats, Jim Matheson.

In Florida, the abusive race between Tea Party darling Allen West and Democrat Patrick Murphy remains a tossup in the 18th district.

Republican Bobby Schilling, a freshman congressman from the Tea Party movement, hopes to preserve his seat in Illinois' 17th district, against Democrat Cheri Bustos.

And California's 10th district sees a tight race between "Astro Jose" Jose Hernandez, former astronaut, and Jeff Denham, a Republican freshman.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/2012-house-senate-results-231006390--election.html

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Poll problems cropping up in spots around US

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Sporadic problems were reported Tuesday at polling places around the country, including a confrontation in Pennsylvania involving Republican inspectors over access to some polls and a last-minute court fight in Ohio over election software. One Florida elections office mistakenly told voters in robocalls the election was on Wednesday.

Although the majority of complaints were simply long lines, the Election Protection coalition of civil rights and voting access groups said they had gotten some more serious calls among more than 35,000 received on a toll-free voter protection hotline.

"''It's already started and it's busy," said Barbara Arnwine, president of the Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law.

In Philadelphia, the Republican Party said 75 legally credentialed voting inspectors were removed from polling places in the heavily Democratic city, prompting the GOP to seek a court order providing them access. Local prosecutors were also looking into the reports. Democratic Party officials did not immediately return a message seeking comment.

The battleground state of Ohio was the scene of yet another court battle, this one involving a lawsuit claiming voting software installed by the state could allow manipulation of ballots by non-election board officials. The lawsuit wants a judge to order Ohio not to use the software ? something state elections officials said would "unnecessarily thwart the smooth operation of the election."

The Florida robocall glitch occurred in Pinellas County, location of St. Petersburg and Tampa Bay. Officials said the calls intended for Monday were wrongly recycled Tuesday, telling possibly thousands of voters they had until "7 p.m. tomorrow" to vote, according to the Tampa Bay Times.

Nancy Whitlock, spokeswoman for the county's supervisor of elections, said officials immediately stopped the calls Tuesday morning when the problem was discovered and a second message went out telling voters to disregard the previous call.

Elsewhere, the Election Protection coalition reported problems with ballot scanners in the Ohio cities of Cleveland, Dayton and Toledo; late-opening polling places in minority neighborhoods in Galveston, Texas; and some precincts in the Tampa, Fla., area where voters are being redirected to another polling place where they must cast a provisional ballot.

Meanwhile, voters in several storm-ravaged areas in New York and New Jersey expressed relief and even elation at being able to vote at all, considering the devastation from Superstorm Sandy. Lines were long in Point Pleasant, N.J., where residents from the Jersey Shore communities of Point Pleasant Beach and Mantoloking had to cast their ballots due to damage in their hometowns. Many people still have no power eight days after Sandy pummeled the shore.

"Nothing is more important than voting. What is the connection between voting and this?" said Alex Shamis, a resident of hard-hit Staten Island, gesturing to his mud-filled home.

Any voting problems are being closely monitored after months of legal and political battles over more voter ID restrictions and other laws, mostly fruitless hunts for supposedly ineligible people on voting rolls in many states and sustained claims that black and Hispanic voters are being targeted for intimidation and suppression.

Michael Waldman, president of the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University, said even in states where the restrictive laws have been blocked or delayed, many people still think they are in effect.

"The laws were struck down but the confusion remains," Waldman said.

Many of these issues could resurface in the courts after Tuesday, particularly if the race between President Barack Obama and his Republican challenger, Mitt Romney, is too close to call or heads for a recount in states such as Ohio or Florida.

The Justice Department will have at least 780 observers at key polling places in 23 states to ensure compliance with the 1965 Voting Rights Act and look into any allegations of voter fraud.

Provisional ballots were the latest legal skirmish in the critical battleground state of Ohio, where Secretary of State Jon Husted's decision on how they can be cast was challenged in federal court. Advocates and lawyers for labor unions contend Husted's order would lead to some provisional ballots being rejected improperly because the burden of recording the form of ID used on a provisional ballot is being placed on voters, not poll workers as in the past.

A provisional vote allows a person to have his or her say, but the ballot is subject to review and verification of eligibility.

A decision was not expected before Election Day, but the judge overseeing the case planned a ruling before Nov. 17, when provisional ballots can begin to be counted in Ohio. Provisional ballots are used more often in Ohio than in most states, with experts predicting between 200,000 and 300,000 will be cast there.

"That could be a huge problem after Election Day for counting ballots," said Wendy Weiser, director of the Brennan Center's Democracy Program. "There's really tens of thousands of voters in Ohio whose votes could be at risk."

___

Contributing to this report were Associated Press writers A.J. Connelly in New York, Andrew Welsh-Huggins in Columbus, Ohio, and Patrick Walters in Philadelphia.

___

Follow Curt Anderson on Twitter: http://twitter.com/Miamicurt

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/poll-problems-cropping-spots-around-us-172724548--election.html

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Video: Virginia remains a toss up



>> tom costello with us from richmond, virginia , tom, good evening.

>> reporter: hi there, brian, this state with the 13 electoral votes used to be republican, but of course went for president obama in 2008 and it is still very much in play here this year. we can also tell you that it was not a coincidence, of course, that governor romney chose norfolk, virginia as place to unveil his vice presidential running mate, paul ryan , both of them were here today. here is the latest, the wall street journal poll for virginia , showing president obama ahead by just a single point, the same margin, rather, in our national poll. obama is counting on a big voter turnout in fairfax, county, in the voter-rich areas of northern virginia . he is also hoping for a turnout in loudoun and prince william counties. meanwhile, mitt romney is hoping to make inroads there, while insuring that his base, the red states come out to vote for him. we also have a very close senate race to tell you about, two are up by three points now. so in the end, this state could make a big difference on who wins the white house .

>> all right, tom costello, now

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/nightly-news/49702270/

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Monday, 5 November 2012

Episcopal Church

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Redskins Rule:How football outcomes predict the presidential election

Is it all over for President Obama because the Washington Redskins lost on Sunday? How the Redskins do the Sunday before Election Day almost always predicts the presidential outcome.

By David Grant,?Staff writer / November 4, 2012

President Obama is a big fan of his hometown Chicago Bears. Here he?s accepting a jersey from former Bears head coach Mike Ditka. Not that he?s superstitious, but on Sunday he should have been rooting for the Washington Redskins.

Charles Dharapak/AP

Enlarge

Like so much else in the 2012 presidential race, neither President Obama nor Mitt Romney will make a clean sweep of some of America?s most curious political indicators: the outcome of professional and college football games.

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Mr. Obama has help from college pigskin, with victories by the University of Alabama and Florida State. But Mr. Romney laid claim to the longest-running predictor when the Washington Redskins lost to the Carolina Panthers on Sunday afternoon.
?
he Redskins Rule, as it?s known, goes like this: if the Redskins win on the Sunday before Election Day, the party that won the popular vote in the prior election will win the Electoral College in the next election. If they lose, the party out of power will triumph.?
?
Back to 1940, the Redskins have been won nine times before Election Day -- and the incumbent party is 9-0 in those years. The nine times the Redskins came up short, the party out of power is 8-1 (the only outlier is the 2004 election, where the Redskins lost to the Green Bay Packers but President George W. Bush defeated Sen. John Kerry).
?
But the pros don?t have a monopoly on presidential prediction. In college football, a Democratic president?s best friend is the University of Alabama. In election years since 1984, the winner of the matchup between the Crimson Tide and the Louisiana State University Tigers (playing for the GOP) has predicted the presidential race every four years.?
?
Alabama, the nation?s perennial football powerhouse in recent years and the top team in the country this year, squeaked by fifth-ranked LSU 21-17 in a marquee prime time matchup Saturday night.?
?
And then there?s the Florida State-Miami predictor that holds sway in only one state ? but because of the Sunshine State?s centrality to Electoral College math, it may as well hold the key to the election this year.?
?
Since 1988, as MSNBC anchor Chuck Todd?originally pointed out, the winner of the game between the Seminoles (Democrats) and the Hurricanes (Republicans) corresponded with the candidate who would go on to win Florida. On Oct. 21, Florida State went into Miami and came away with a 33-20 victory.?
?
While Florida State, then ranked 12th in the country and now up to the ninth best team in college football, wasn?t an underdog when they came to South Beach, an Obama victory in Florida would be a slight upset.?
?
Currently, polls from Florida show a very even contest. Nevertheless, many election prediction models and prediction markets point toward a slight edge for Romney there.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/-EagBjzm0UM/Redskins-Rule-How-football-outcomes-predict-the-presidential-election

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Cold weather and new storm add to victims' misery

First responders who worked through last Monday's storm surge by Superstorm Sandy, listen as they are acknowledged by Diocese of Trenton American Roman Catholic Bishop David M. O'Connell during services at the Church of Saint Rose in Belmar, N.J., Sunday, Nov. 4, 2012. (AP Photo/Mel Evans)

First responders who worked through last Monday's storm surge by Superstorm Sandy, listen as they are acknowledged by Diocese of Trenton American Roman Catholic Bishop David M. O'Connell during services at the Church of Saint Rose in Belmar, N.J., Sunday, Nov. 4, 2012. (AP Photo/Mel Evans)

Workers scrape up mud and tiles from flood-damaged Saint Rose High School in Belmar, N.J., Sunday, Nov. 4, 2012, as the region tries clean up the damage from Monday's storm surge by Superstorm Sandy. (AP Photo/Mel Evans)

Maryann Eger cries during Mass in the New Dorp neighborhood of Staten Island, N.Y., Sunday, Nov. 4, 2012, as the region copes in the aftermath of Superstorm Sandy. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

Worshippers listen to a service by Diocese of Trenton American Roman Catholic Bishop David M. O'Connell at the Church of Saint Rose in Belmar, N.J., Sunday, Nov. 4, 2012. Many in the region who went through Monday's storm surge by Superstorm Sandy are still without power. (AP Photo/Mel Evans)

A woman scavenges a sack of onions discarded by a Coney Island supermarket in the Brooklyn borough of New York, Sunday, Nov. 4, 2012 in New York. Many people in Coney Island are still living without heat, and some without electricity, six days after Sandy struck the region. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)

(AP) ? Shivering victims of Superstorm Sandy went to church Sunday to pray for deliverance as cold weather settling in across the New York metropolitan region ? and another powerful storm forecast for the middle of the week ? added to their misfortunes and deepened the gloom.

With overnight temperatures sinking into the 30s and hundreds of thousands of homes and businesses still without electricity six days after Sandy howled through, people slept in layers of clothes, and New York City officials handed out blankets and urged victims to go to overnight shelters or daytime warming centers.

At the same time, government leaders began to grapple with a daunting longer-term problem: where to find housing for the tens of thousands of people whose homes could be uninhabitable for weeks or months because of a combination of storm damage and cold weather.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg said 30,000 to 40,000 New Yorkers may need to be relocated ? a monumental task in a city where housing is scarce and expensive ? though he said that number will probably drop to 20,000 within a couple of weeks as power is restored in more places.

In a heavily flooded Staten Island neighborhood, Sara Zavala spent the night under two blankets and layers of clothing because the power was out. She had a propane heater but turned it on for only a couple of hours in the morning. She did not want to sleep with it running at night.

"When I woke up, I was like, 'It's freezing.' And I thought, 'This can't go on too much longer,'" said Zavala, a nursing home admissions coordinator.

Nearly a week after Sandy slammed into the New Jersey coastline in an assault that killed more than 100 people in 10 states, gasoline shortages persisted across the region, though odd-even rationing got under way in northern New Jersey in an echo of the gas crisis of the 1970s. Nearly 1 million homes and businesses were still without power in New Jersey, and about 650,000 in New York City, its northern suburbs and Long Island.

With more subways running and most city schools reopening on Monday, large swaths of the city were getting back to something resembling normal. But the week could bring new challenges, namely an Election Day without power in hundreds of polling places, and a nor'easter expected to hit by Wednesday, with the potential for 55 mph gusts and more beach erosion, flooding and rain.

"Prepare for more outages," said National Weather Service meteorologist Joe Pollina. "Stay indoors. Stock up again."

"Well, the first storm flooded me out, and my landlord tells me there's a big crack in the ceiling, so I guess there's a chance this storm could do more damage," John Lewis said at a shelter in New Rochelle, N.Y. "I was hoping to get back in there sooner rather than later, but it doesn't look good."

Churchgoers packed the pews Sunday in parkas, scarves and boots and looked for solace in faith.

At the chilly Church of St. Rose in Belmar, N.J., its streets still slippery with foul-smelling mud, Roman Catholic Bishop David O'Connell said he had no good answer for why God would allow such destruction. But he assured parishioners: "There's more good, and there's more joy, and there's more happiness in life than there is the opposite. And it will be back."

In the heart of the Staten Island disaster zone, the Rev. Steve Martino of Movement Church headed a volunteer effort that had scores of people delivering supplies in grocery carts and cleaning out ruined homes. Around midday, the work stopped, and volunteer and victim alike bowed their heads in prayer.

In the crowd was Stacie Piacentino. After a singularly difficult week, she said, "it's good to feel God again."

After the abrupt cancellation of Sunday's New York City Marathon, some of those who had been planning to run the 26.2-mile race through the city streets instead volunteered their time, handing out toothbrushes, batteries, sweatshirts and other supplies on Staten Island.

Thousands of other athletes from around the world ran anyway inside Central Park, where a little more than four laps around it amounted to a marathon. "A lot of people just want to finish what they've started," said Lance Svendsen, organizer of a group called Run Anyway.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo said New York state is facing "a massive, massive housing problem" for those whose neighborhoods or buildings are in such bad shape that they won't have power for weeks or months.

"I don't know that anybody has ever taken this number of people and found housing for them overnight," Bloomberg said. "We don't have a lot of empty housing in this city," he added. "We're not going to let anybody go sleeping in the streets. ... But it's a challenge, and we're working on it."

The mayor and the governor gave no details of where and how the victims might be housed.

Already, crowding was becoming an issue.

Sue Chadwick, who left her Bayville, Long Island, house ahead of the storm, said Sunday night she and others were told to leave the Extended Stay America hotel room in Melville that she booked through the end of next week to make room for other storm victims.

Chadwick's house is uninhabitable while repairs are made so she's staying in Vermont with family and taking time off from work.

"It just seemed morally wrong that you had people who made reservations and are paying," she said. "We have the need. It's not like I'm there on business and could catch the next plane out. There are people in worse shape, but I just feel like when people are in these dire circumstances, you don't want to make it worse."

The phone rang unanswered at the Melville hotel Sunday night. The corporate offices in Charlotte, N.C., are closed weekends and an operator said to call back Monday.

After Hurricanes Katrina and Rita smashed the Gulf Coast in 2005, hundreds of thousands of victims were put up by the Federal Emergency Management Agency in trailers, hotels, cruise ships and apartments across several states for months and even years.

George W. Contreras, associate director of the emergency and disaster management program at Metropolitan College of New York, speculated that large encampments of trailers might be set up at a stadium, in a park or in some other open space in the city ? something he couldn't recall being done in New York ever before.

"The amount of actual units the city might have in buildings is probably very limited, so I think people will be in FEMA shelters for a while," he said.

On a basketball court flanked by powerless apartment buildings in the Far Rockaway section of Queens, volunteers for the city handed out bagels, diapers, water, blankets and other necessities. Genice Josey stuffed a blanket into a garbage bag.

"Nights are the worst because you feel like you're outside when you're inside," said Josey, who sleeps under three blankets and wears longjohns under her pajamas. "You shiver yourself to sleep." She added: "It's like we're going back to barbaric times where we had to go find food and clothing and shelter."

Fearing looters, Nick Veros and his relatives were hoping to hold out in their storm-damaged Staten Island home until power was restored. He figured the indoor temperature would plunge into the 40s.

"If we get two consecutive below-freezing days, I'm probably going to have to drain the water out of the pipes," he said, "and then we'll have to get out of the house."

___

Associated Press writers Michael Rubinkam, Cara Anna, David B. Caruso, Tom Hays, Michael Hill, Hillel Italie, Christina Rexrode in New York; Jim Fitzgerald in Mount Vernon, N.Y.; and Ben Nuckols in Belmar, N.J., contributed to this story.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-11-04-Superstorm%20Sandy/id-bb90286ce60f428ca6bf15b9230ebd58

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Sunday, 4 November 2012

'What can I do?': New Yorkers seek ways to help

Volunteers walk toward homes to help residents clean up, Saturday, Nov. 3, 2012, in Staten Island, N.Y. A Superstorm Sandy relief fund is being created just for residents of the hard-hit New York City borough. Former Mayor Rudolph Giuliani and Borough President James Molinaro say the fund will help residents displaced from their homes. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez)

Volunteers walk toward homes to help residents clean up, Saturday, Nov. 3, 2012, in Staten Island, N.Y. A Superstorm Sandy relief fund is being created just for residents of the hard-hit New York City borough. Former Mayor Rudolph Giuliani and Borough President James Molinaro say the fund will help residents displaced from their homes. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez)

Volunteer Christina Wilson, left, helps clean up the kitchen of the Ventura family, which was flooded during Superstorm Sandy, Saturday, Nov. 3, 2012, in Staten Island, N.Y. A Superstorm Sandy relief fund is being created just for residents of the hard-hit New York City borough. Former Mayor Rudolph Giuliani and Borough President James Molinaro say the fund will help residents displaced from their homes. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez)

Kiva Kahl pour hot tea to neighbor Buddy Sammis,right, after she prepared it on an wood-stoked fire and cooking setup she and her fiance created in the street in front of their house on Beach 91st Street in the Rockaways, Saturday, Nov. 3, 2012 in New York. More New Yorkers awoke Saturday to power being restored for the first time since Superstorm Sandy pummeled the region, but patience wore thin among those in the region who have been without power for most of the week. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)

(AP) ? Normally on a Saturday morning, Erica Siegel, a 33-year-old real estate agent, would be working or taking a run. But this weekend found her packing rolls of toilet paper, boxes of garbage bags, and canned vegetables and soups to bring to a Queens park, where they would be sorted for delivery to storm victims.

Siegel's also been asking fellow real estate agents to join her in an effort, advertised on Facebook pages and blogs, to find vacant homes ? for sale or rent ? to help house storm evacuees.

"I have to tell you, it feels like a virus going around, this need to help," she said, speaking a mile a minute as she raced to get out of her house. "So many people are feeling it."

In ways big and small, ordinary people from storm-affected areas are seeking out opportunities to help. In terms of drama, these efforts don't rise to the level of the heroic rescues that have made TV newscasts ? like the man who ventured into chest-deep waters to rescue a stranded cab driver. But they are a way, these people say, of giving something, if just a little, to those who, by mere chance and geography, suffered more than they did.

"It turns out, people really, really want to do something," said Lyn Pentecost of the Lower Eastside Girls Club, which serves some 150 low-income families and was thrilled to find supporters donating more than $15,000 in less than four hours Saturday, following a 7 a.m. email. "They just want to know how to do it."

A world away on the Upper East Side, where power was never lost, Kim Hartman, a mother of three, was one of those who found herself searching for ways to help.

"I looked at the kids and they were sitting around, doing nothing," she said. "I wanted to stop the inertia."

So she took two of her kids and a friend to a local food pantry, where they spent three hours preparing packages for the needy. It turned out there were too many volunteers on subsequent days, so this weekend, the family is making hundreds of packaged lunches at home and bringing them over.

"This makes it very real to my kids," said Hartman, who's also hosting four guests from areas without power. "You can look at the pictures, but I think you need to walk out the front door, to really feel the change that has happened in the city."

The efforts are being organized in a myriad of ways: On Facebook pages and Twitter feeds, community blogs, school email lists, or by word of mouth. They are supplementing the much larger-scale efforts by relief agencies like the American Red Cross and religious-affiliated organizations like the Southern Baptist Disaster Relief, the Catholic Charities of New York or the United Methodist Committee on Relief.

The smaller, community-based efforts tend to focus on more specific needs. And so, while the Red Cross encourages financial donations, rather than material goods, as the most effective way to help, Staten Islander Sean Sweeney's Facebook page is full of requests for work gloves, boys' shoes, a generator for a family in distress, or an immediate need for manpower on a certain street corner.

"Anyone looking to get dirty can meet me at 326 Seaver Avenue this morning," Sweeney, a former community board chairman in the hard-hit borough and also an amateur photographer, posted on Saturday. "Bring gloves and your Resolve and I don't mean carpet cleaner."

"I am looking for boys' clothes 'n toys for 8 and 10 year old boys!!!" one woman wrote earlier. "Work gloves are needed," wrote another. "New - Used - Mismatched. It doesn't matter."

A few days ago on his page, Sweeney says, he asked if anyone could spare a generator for a man who was a quadriplegic and had no power. Within hours, he had not only a generator but someone to help him bring it over.

"People have opened their hearts," Sweeney said. "With Staten Islanders, there's zero degrees of separation. This is the kind of thing Staten Islanders do."

In Queens, where Siegel, the real estate agent, was packing food and supplies on Saturday, she was joined by fellow teammates who had all planned to run Sunday's marathon together. Mayor Michael Bloomberg had canceled the race the night before. So the team decided to meet anyway and keep an earlier plan to work on hurricane relief, followed by a brainstorming session for their next marathon, in Pennsylvania next week.

On the Upper West Side of Manhattan, where residents were relatively unaffected by Sandy, volunteer coordinator Shelly Fine found a similar spirit of resolve.

Fine, a former assistant schools superintendent who is trained in rescue efforts, put out an appeal for volunteers and found himself fielding hundreds of calls and emails. "People were very forthcoming, offering their time and their skills," he said. "They're saying, 'What can I do?'"

Fine found that the best use of his own time was sitting in front of the computer and matching offers to needs ? for example, two shelters closed and he had to redirect people to another. One shelter found it needed hygienic wipes to clean cots. Another needed trained medical personnel.

Elliot Zweig, 32, works at a nonprofit think tank, and found himself wanting to help out on Wednesday. He contacted Fine through a blog called the West Side Rag. Soon, he and his wife, a nurse practitioner, were staffing the medical room of a shelter on 84th Street. It was the first time Zweig had volunteered in a similar way since 9/11.

"I watched the TV news, saw all the tragedy and devastation, and I felt very spared ? I was safe and comfortable," Zweig said. "We were the lucky ones, who could help."

This week, it's been hard to log onto a website of any organization ? a school, a gym, even a store ? and not see a reference to Sandy and efforts to help. The 92nd Street Y, in Manhattan, offered families free arts classes and gym time. PTA groups at schools discussed bake sales to raise money.

On a larger scale, NBC held a benefit concert Friday night, featuring Jon Bon Jovi, Bruce Springsteen and other stars, with donations going to the Red Cross. Barneys New York, the luxury store, was giving 10 percent of its proceeds from Sunday sales to the Red Cross.

Some recovery efforts involved not a group, but merely an individual seeking to help a neighbor. Julia Strom spent three nights ? from 6 p.m. to 9 a.m. ? caring for a woman in her 90s by candlelight. Doing so "was a privilege; it heightens and beautifies life," the 53-year-old Strom said.

Sometimes, agreed Pentecost, of the Lower Eastside Girls Club, it's the littlest things that count the most ? what she called "small acts of great love."

Her group was planning to take the thousands of dollars raised this weekend and stuff a bunch of $20 bills into envelopes for families who need to pay that next cellphone bill. Or stock the refrigerator.

"People have to throw out everything in their fridges," she noted. "This is restock-the-fridge money."

"I understand the need for FEMA and the Red Cross and all the rest," she added. "But we're talking about no lines, no red tape. Just immediate help. These people have suffered enough."

___

Associated Press Writer Verena Dobnik contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-11-03-Superstorm-Helping%20Out/id-4c70c395de534190bb47a4648b97d7ab

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3D Printers Are Not Like 2D Printers: A Rant

printer-smashThe last time I wrote about 3D printers, an appalling number of people in the comments - including VCs who really, really should know better - kept writing things like: "Nearly identical comments were made about personal computers, desktop printers, color printers, laser printers..." and "just like printing at home" and "Let's use the traditional paper printer as an example" and "it will follow the same trend as 2D printing" and and and and and. Recently the very same thing happened to me in casual conversation. And so, this rant:

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/KcYVR-qw7Ac/

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Biggest NY harbor oil terminal resumes partial operations

(Reuters) - The 16-million-barrel International-Matex Tank Terminals oil terminal in Bayonne, New Jersey has partially re-opened following power losses due to superstorm Sandy, its operator said on Saturday.

The fuel terminal, the biggest in the New York Harbor, is still "coming back online," said terminal manager Richard Fisette.

As of Saturday, around half of the facilities at the site were back to normal operation and the major regional fuel repository was awaiting nominations, or orders to ship out fuel, from its customers, Fisette said.

A pipeline serving the facility is operational and damage assessments at the site have not indicated fuel leakage from tanks or pipelines there, Fisette added.

Bayonne, New Jersey was hard hit by Sandy and, like other low-lying areas of the Northeast, suffered flooding and power outages when Sandy made landfall on Monday.

A part owner of the IMTT terminal, Macquarie, said on Friday that the terminal was expected to restart next week.

The Bayonne terminal, which houses 620 tanks, is located 10 miles south of Manhattan and covers an area of 600 acres. It includes loading and unloading facilities for truck and rail, and a dedicated IMTT pipeline linking it to the main long-haul oil product pipelines into the Northeast region.

Located in both New York and New Jersey, the New York Harbor's facilities can store more than 75 million barrels of oil. IMTT's terminal accounts for around a fifth of the Harbor's total capacity.

The Harbor resumed operations and ship traffic on Friday, but oil industry sources say that supply chains are still under strain, and some other New York Harbor fuel terminals are still completely shut.

Retail gasoline and heating oil distribution remains strained following Sandy. Some heating oil distributors in the New York City area said on Friday they are uncertain when regular shipments of heating fuel will resume from the Harbor to distribution centers around the city.

IMTT, headquartered in New Orleans, Louisiana, owns and operates 10 marine storage terminals in the United States and is the part owner and operator of two terminals in Canada. It has a storage capacity of more than 43 million barrels across all its terminals.

(Reporting by Joshua Schneyer; Editing by Eric Walsh)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/biggest-ny-harbor-oil-terminal-resumes-partial-operations-202925631--finance.html

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Saturday, 3 November 2012

DuPage County Announces the Official Launch of the DuPage ...

On Tuesday, Oct. 9, 2012, the Emergency Telephone System Board of DuPage County [?DuPage ETSB?] announced the official launch of the DuPage Emergency Dispatch Interoperable Radio System (DuPage Radio System).

DuPage County Board Chairman Dan Cronin said the new DuPage Radio System will allow all police, fire, and emergency personnel to communicate with each other on a daily basis as well as during any type of a public safety emergency event utilizing the STARCOM21 statewide radio network.

?It is imperative that our first responders use the most current technology allowing them to properly handle any kind of situation that develops throughout the county,? said Cronin. ?STARCOM21 not only allows DuPage County fire and police personnel to seamlessly talk to each other, it also enables interoperability with 30,000 STARCOM21 subscribers representing state, local, and federal agencies across Illinois.?

ETSB Chairman JR McBride said the $30 million project was funded through a $2.35 million federal grant in addition to money collected through the 911 wireless surcharge.

?This $30 million public safety project represents the largest financial investment DuPage ETSB has made in advancing essential 911 emergency services,? said McBride.

In December 2010, the DuPage ETS board members unanimously approved the $28 million dollar contract to Motorola, Inc..

The DuPage ETSB Radio System consists of 3,134 portable and mobile radios and 53 MCC7500 radio consoles in nine 911 Public Safety Answering Points [PSAPs] throughout the DuPage ETSB system. This project represents the melding of 60 police and fire public safety agencies into one interoperable radio system.

The contract with Motorola highlights the change in strategic direction from owning the radio infrastructure to utilizing the STARCOM21 system. The decision to subscribe to STARCOM21 was twofold: affordability and interoperability. Leveraging the economies of scale made possible by STARCOM21, saved the County $18 million ($30 million vs. $48 million) as compared to the County?s estimates for constructing its own private system. Interoperability is an essential element during major events that demand substantial public safety resources.

This type of interoperability also allows for DuPage ETSB Public Safety Answering Points [PSAPs] to move seamlessly between locations if a PSAP or communication centers become disabled without jeopardizing 911 emergency communications for public safety personnel who are responding to critical incidents within the participating communities of DuPage ETSB.

STARCOM21 is Illinois? statewide digital public safety radio system and provides coverage for over 98 percent of the State of Illinois. The network currently provides public safety communications for state and local public safety agencies. The STARCOM21 network is a public-private partnership between Motorola Solutions and the State of Illinois.

Jack Molloy, regional vice president, North America Government, Motorola Solutions, said ?Motorola Solutions is proud to work together with DuPage County on the radio system initiative. The new radio system will provide regional interoperability for DuPage County and bring economies of scale to the DuPage County radio users. We just witnessed this with the recent success the radio system played in helping DuPage County support the Ryder Cup.?

The DuPage Radio System was operational and utilized for the County?s hosting of the 39th Ryder Cup at the Medinah Country Club in September 2012. All police departments that are members of DuPage ETSB that participated in the NATO conference events or activities in May 2012 also utilized DuPage Radio System portables to ensure seamless coverage and interoperability. In addition, 60 portable radios were utilized for the visit of President Hu Jintao of China during his January 2011 tour of Chicago and Woodridge.

Hinsdale Police Chief Bradley Bloom, whose department is currently using the new radio system, said this is the biggest improvement in the past 30 years for law enforcement?s ability to properly respond to both a localized or large-scale emergency.

?When it comes to public safety, communication is everything. Prior to having the implementation of this radio system, we had 32 disparate radio networks and officers couldn?t always communicate across jurisdictional lines. Today, not only can public safety communicate anywhere in the county, but we have also dramatically improved our ability to communicate during a multi-jurisdictional public safety response,? said Bloom.

Oak Brook Police Department is one of the agencies currently using the STARCOM21system.

?The men and women of the Oak Brook Police Department will provide the community with the highest quality of law enforcement services, preserve and protect the lives, property and constitutional guarantees of all persons with a commitment of professional excellence through loyalty, honor and teamwork,? said Jason Cates, deputy chief of the Oak Brook Police Department.

The STARCOM21 radio system launched by ETSB has also been commended by local officials such as DuPage Mayors and Managers Conference President Rodney Craig.

?Congratulations to the true beneficiaries of this system: the citizens who are protected by the more than 3,300 first responders who will utilize this network. A job well done with hard work and dedication by all the groups represented on the ETS Board,? said Craig.

ETSB member and Addison Village Manager Joe Block said collaboration was key to ensuring a new radio system that worked for all of the involved agencies.

?The tragedy of Sept. 11, 2001, led to this collaborative effort that has involved 60 public safety agencies in DuPage County. The DuPage Mayors and Managers Conference is proud to have been a part of the team that spearheaded the biggest advancement in public safety in the last 25 years,? said Block.

Source: http://psc.apcointl.org/2012/11/02/dupage-county-announces-the-official-launch-of-the-dupage-emergency-dispatch-interoperable-radio-system/

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Colin Firth, Michael Fassbender set for A. Scott Berg adaptation 'Genius'

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Jelly Bean build for the Droid RAZR HD leaks out

Android Central

When the Droid RAZR HD was announced, Motorola was quick to note the Android 4.1 powered device would indeed be getting an update to Android 4.1 Jelly Bean by the end of the year. One could conclude from that that Motorola has been doing some testing of the update in an effort to get it ready by that time but alas, owners are still waiting. While we wait though, the more adventurous out there may want to check out a new Jelly Bean leak that has now popped up.

Labeled as "9.1.39Xt926.verizon.en.us" this release is noted to be non-official and carries with it the typical slew of warnings, like the fact that if you load it - you may end up stuck on this build for a while and it's potentially full of bugs.

You won't have to be rooted to load it up but you should be stock, it can be side-loaded as well but if you're looking to keep the root access you currently have you'll need to back up root using OTA Root keeper. Again, not for everyone to take for a spin but if you're interested, you can hit the source link below to learn more and grab the downloads.

Source: DroidRazr



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/5roW8AKRR3Y/story01.htm

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Path App Winds Its Way Onto the iPad

Path, the "personal social network," is now available on the iPad. Besides being expanded to fit the 9.7-inch size of the iPad, the app introduces a handsome photo collage in landscape mode for perusing back through your timeline visually.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/GearFactor/~3/LGM2mqKXOAY/

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Vote shelved on Jindal health outsourcing plan ...

BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) ? Gov. Bobby Jindal's top budget adviser scrapped a legislative vote Thursday on the governor's proposal to outsource a state employee health insurance plan, when it became clear the contract didn't have enough support to win approval.

Commissioner of Administration Kristy Nichols pulled the proposed contract between the Office of Group Benefits and Blue Cross/Blue Shield from consideration after four hours of discussion. Her decision sidetracked an attempt by House opponents to vote on rejecting the proposal outright.

"We'd like to come back at a later date," Nichols said.

The House and Senate budget committees ended their joint meeting in a flurry of votes that went nowhere because the two sides couldn't agree on anything, not even a vote to delay a decision on the contract until next week.

Jindal proposed hiring the private company as a cost-cutting move to manage a state employee health insurance plan that covers 62,000 workers, retirees and their dependents. Critics question the savings estimates and worry the change could harm health benefits for workers.

"There are some very legitimate concerns," said Senate President John Alario, R-Westwego, a Jindal ally who persuaded senators to delay a decision rather than vote on a House motion to refuse the contract.

"I think we probably need to give a little more thought and a little more time on this issue," he said.

Nichols said the outsourcing plan would save money by consolidating duplicative administrative costs because Blue Cross/Blue Shield already runs a larger insurance plan for state workers in a contract with the office. She said employees and retirees would have more doctors available to them.

"This is one example of what I would consider a very easy administrative decision. We have duplicative functions for the same services, and the result of centralizing those functions has no impact to members, with the exception that they get greater access to a number of providers," Nichols said.

Lawmakers said they had been flooded with calls from state employees and retirees who don't understand the outsourcing plan and don't believe it would improve their costs or care. Some legislators said even if the idea was good, state workers had such mistrust of the Jindal administration that they wouldn't believe it.

"I know in my heart that this is not the right thing to do," said Ed Parker, a representative of the Louisiana chapter of the workers' union, the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees.

A few hours after the committee vote was shelved, Nichols issued a statement saying she was confident lawmakers would support the contract.

It was the second time a voted had been delayed.

The outsourcing, if approved, would take effect Jan. 1 and eliminate 111 government jobs, including up to 88 people who would be laid off.

The governor hadn't intended to seek budget committee approval, but the attorney general's office said the contract required it.

Nichols said the contract with Blue Cross would save $20 million annually. The Legislative Fiscal Office said about $9 million of that would be savings to state agencies, and the rest would be split among local school boards and state employees.

Rep. Cameron Henry, R-Metairie, asked why local school leaders hadn't called their lawmakers to support the contract if the school systems would be saving money.

Scott Richard, head of the Louisiana School Boards Association, said the boards hadn't received information from the Jindal administration about the savings.

Opponents of the Blue Cross objected to the layoffs and said the current group benefits leadership runs the health plan efficiently, processing claims quickly. They said they were concerned that to achieve savings long-term, insurance rates will have to be raised or benefits decreased.

Source: http://washingtonexaminer.com/vote-shelved-on-jindal-health-outsourcing-plan/article/feed/2044566?custom_click=rss

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Friday, 2 November 2012

Iron Nazi space Buddha may be fake, definitely from space

In a report released online, a Buddhism expert writes that the features of the statue are 'pseudo-Tibetan' and are more likely to be a European reproduction

By Stephanie Pappas,?LiveScience Senior Writer / October 25, 2012

A Buddha statue dating back to the 8th to 10th centuries is carved from a rare iron meteorite.

Elmar Buchner

Enlarge

Researchers who reported that a potentially ancient Buddha statue is carved from a meteorite said they are not surprised that an expert in Buddhist history believes the statue to be a fake.

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"Honestly, that is what we expected," said Elmar Buchner, who along with his colleague?reported on the statue in September?in the journal Meteoritics & Planetary Science. "We heard so many opinions from so many experts in art history and experts for Buddhism on the origins and the age of the statue prior to and after the publication."

The most public of these consultations is a new report from Achim Bayer, a Buddhism expert at Dongguk University in South Korea. In a report released online, Bayer writes that the features of the statue are "pseudo-Tibetan" and are?more likely to be a European reproduction?dating from 1910 to 1970 than a true ancient carving dating back 1,000 years, as Buchner and his colleagues had estimated.

Bayer did not contest that the statue is a made of meteorite

"The non-Asian features of the 'lama wearing trousers' should be immediately obvious to any scholar in the field," Bayer wrote, referring to the statue as a "lama" or guru. The shoes, pants and sleeves of the man's garments are all wrong for ancient Tibet, he wrote. The statue's hands, eyes and ears are also shaped unusually for Tibetan art, he said.

The statue was said to have come to Germany in the possession of a pre-World War II scientific expedition commissioned by the?Nazi party. Bayer called that into question, too, saying there is no documentation of the statue's transfer and arguing that it is more likely a fake created in the 20th century for the antique or Nazi-memorabilia market.

"For us, Bayer's hypothesis is just one opinion," Buchner wrote in an email to LiveScience. "However, we cannot decide whether this hypothesis is valid or not because we are not the experts in art history, and we told the press that our assumptions are speculative, accordingly," wrote Buchner, who is a geologist.

The geochemical analysis of the meteorite is still sound, Buchner said. The team found that the material used to make the statue is a rare type of iron- and nickel-rich meteorite from a meteorite fall along the Siberian-Tibetan border. [Top 5 Weirdest Meteorites]

That cosmic origin brings up one more mystery in the tale of the controversial space Buddha.

"I think it is not convincing that anybody took a very precious meteorite to produce a reproduction for the local antique market!?" Buchner wrote.

Follow Stephanie Pappas on Twitter?@sipappas?or LiveScience?@livescience. We're also on?Facebook?&?Google+.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/PUlwSpVZhE4/Iron-Nazi-space-Buddha-may-be-fake-definitely-from-space

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Thursday, 1 November 2012

Live Blog Data: Apple Vs Microsoft

When it comes to pitting Windows Phone 8 up against the iPhone, ere's an early, if highly unscientific and unconventional, indicator of market sentiment based on interest in our liveblogs.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/GearFactor/~3/w_vJD_vo16o/

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Sony cuts Q2 2012 losses to $198 million, bumps revenue to $20.6 billion thanks to mobile

Sony's

After losing a whopping $5.7 billion last year and $312 million last quarter, Sony's recent austerity measures seem to be paying off -- the company lost only $198 million in Q2. The company's been madly restructuring since CEO Kazuo Hirai came on board last year, and recently shuttered a lens plant in Japan while moving its mobile HQ from Sweden to Tokyo. Altogether, 10,000 jobs cuts are projected this year by Sony order to stanch the red ink, and it looks like it's started to pay off. Notably, the company saw a drop in restructuring costs over last year, when it incurred charges during the sell-off of its display businesses.

By division, Sony's mobile operations continue to generate more revenue, gaining $3.9 billion this quarter -- more than double last year's numbers -- though it still lost $296 million compared to $356 million in Q2. Its chip plants turned around last year's losses to gain $382 million this time, likely due in part to its sensors appearing in a large number of various company's DSLRs. Its own imaging division underperformed a bit compared to last quarter but still made a small gain, while its gaming, music and picture businesses each made small gains. Finally, while home entertainment products like TVs and home theater systems still lost $203 million, which is still a big improvement over Q2 2011's dismal figure.

The company is projecting a slight drop in revenue for its fiscal year ending in March 2013, to $83 billion compared to August's forecast.

Developing...

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Sony cuts Q2 2012 losses to $198 million, bumps revenue to $20.6 billion thanks to mobile originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 01 Nov 2012 02:23:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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

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