Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Sports City to come up near Bangalore

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Bangalore, July 28:??

The Karnataka Olympic Association (KOA) today said it has initiated talks with the state government for the setting up of an international standard Sports City here.

?I met Youth Affairs and Sports K Abhayachandra Jain and initiated the talks of constructing an international standard Sports City nearly 80 kilometrs away from the city,? KOA President K Govindraj told reporters here after Annual General Body Meeting.

Three land sites have been identified on Chikaballapur and Mysore roads and also near Kolar for setting up the proposed sports city. The city, which is planned to be built on a plot of forty to fifty acres land, would be built on Public-Private Partnership (PPP) model.

?We do not want the Government to spend any money on the project, expect providing us with land,? he said.

Govindraj said the proposed City would have state-of-the-art facilities and was planned to create a niche in world sports for the country.

?The sports city would also house world-class sports academies where young sportspersons will get best of the training from experts. In next three years athletes will have a big scope for getting wildcats training facilities near the city,? Govindraj said.

He also announced that the State Government?s plans to improve facilities at the Kanteerava Stadium in the city.

Govindraj said that Chief Minister Siddaramaiah has assured separate allocations of funds for improving sports facilities in his supplementary budget presentation.

The KOA also requested Siddaramaiah to make provisions for holding State Olympic Games once in every two years mandatorily.

Housing Minister M H Ambareesh has assured housing plots to sportspersons who had represented the state or the country at higher levels of the games, he said.

(This article was published on July 28, 2013)

Source: http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/news/sports/sports-city-to-come-up-near-bangalore/article4963338.ece

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Monday, July 29, 2013

Biometric Fingerprint Sensor For iPhone ?Leaked? In Latest iOS 7 Build

Biometric Fingerprint Sensor For iPhone ?Leaked? In Latest iOS 7 Build

Somewhere in the bowels of iOS 7 Beta 4 is a folder labeled "BiometricKitUI," which lends a bit of credence towards the rumors that the next iPhone might have a biometric sensor embedded in the Home button.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/gjxYP9EjYOg/biometric-fingerprint-sensor-for-iphone-leaked-in-lat-951977373

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Portitle Finds and Aggregates All the Movie Info You Could Ever Need

Portitle Finds and Aggregates All the Movie Info You Could Ever Need

Windows/Chrome: When you're trying to find a movie to watch, you might want to look it up on IMDB, then read about it on Wikipedia, then try to find a place to watch it. Portitle puts all of this info in one place, and is accessible from your right click menu.

Portitle works on Chrome and Windows, and both flavors do pretty much the same thing. Just right click on a movie file, or highlight its name in Chrome and right click, and send it to Portitle. The service will attempt to detect the movie, then give you links to a ton of different services to augment your experience. You'll get direct access to the obvious places like Rotten Tomatoes and IMDB, but also to various services to download and watch the movie, both legitimate and nefarious. If you already have the film on your computer, Portitle even offers direct download links for subtitles from various sources.

Obviously, Portitle isn't finding anything you couldn't find yourself, but it's nice to have it all collected in one place.

Portitle (Free) via freewaregenius

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/o1qFLNRBLeM/portitle-finds-and-aggregates-all-the-movie-info-you-co-934742550

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Sunday, July 28, 2013

Don't blame Santa: Xbox and PlayStation supply probably won't meet demand ... again

Video games

2 hours ago

When it comes to shipping video game consoles to gamers on time, "I don't think the management of the supply chain is their core competency," R.W. Baird analyst Colin Sebastian told NBC News.

Amazon

When it comes to shipping video game consoles to gamers on time, "I don't think the management of the supply chain is their core competency," R.W. Baird analyst Colin Sebastian told NBC News.

We've all heard the story: the long lines of Apple fans lining up outside the store, breathlessly awaiting that first chance to get their hands on the new iPhone. But when it comes to video game consoles, the throngs of die-hard gamers are all the more feverish simply because the wait has been longer, the anticipation higher.

Despite the fact that the video game industry is now on its eighth generation of console hardware, it still seems like every new release of an Xbox or PlayStation is, on some level, a disaster. Pre-order quotas are quickly maxed out, and impatient gamers turn to eBay or (God forbid) Craigslist to pay an extra premium just to get their gadget of choice in time for the holiday season.

Even the Wii U, which Nintendo itself has admitted isn't selling all that well, faced supply setbacks when it launched last year. And it doesn't look like things are shaping up to be any different for the $499 Xbox One or the $399 PlayStation 4 ? both consoles received record-breaking pre-orders, and the gaming press has already started warning of possible shortages after Robert W. Baird analyst Colin Sebastian predicted as much in an interview with GameSpot.

Judging by the excitement for the consoles, the demand is clearly there. So why is meeting it with a proper supply so tricky? Sebastian told NBC News that with all the moving parts that Sony and Microsoft have to coordinate in time for a tight holiday release window, things get, well, "complex."

"There's a lot of gyration in the supply chain," Sebastian said. "It's hard to get everything together at the same time."

What, exactly, is "gyration in the supply chain"?
Michael Pachter, an analyst at Wedbush Securities, explained. "The manufacturers have to plan production for two or three years out, so they tend to plan to make 10 (million) to 12 million consoles annually at the outset, and adjust upward or downward based on demand," Pachter told NBC News in an email. "They probably haven?t commenced manufacture yet, and will probably do so in mid-August ? notice we haven?t seen leaked pictures from the assembly line yet. That means around 1 million per month, and it takes time to ship to retail. We?ll probably get 2 ? 3 million of each globally at retail by year-end."

"If you think demand will exceed that figure, there will be a shortage," Pachter added. With major retailers like Best Buy, Amazon and GameStop vying for more launch units, "allocations are especially tough, because everyone wants as many as they can get."

Piers Harding-Rolls, head of games at economic research firm IHS Global Insight, agreed, adding that the international dimension of global launch only makes organizing the supply chain all the more difficult.

"All console companies aim to have a smooth launch with as few 'lumps' in the distribution chain as possible," Harding-Rolls wrote in an email to NBC News. "Distribution smoothness depends on a number of factors: amount of total inventory (how quickly factories can build products that don't fall apart), regional allocations (how many sales are expected across major sales territories) and sales channel negotiations (agreements with retail stores)."

When a product launches across multiple regions at the same time, he said, consumer electronics companies "are more likely to get 'lumpy' distribution which will lead to shortages within specific channels because it is a more complex go-to-market process." When a shortage occurs in one region or another, "the speed at which manufacturers can respond to squeezed supply depends on willingness to spend on quicker shipments and availability of additional product."

Jordan Selburn of IHS told NBC News that this kind of bottleneck dramatically hampered Sony's initial launch of the PlayStation 3 in 2006 because the console's Blu-ray was built with blue laser diodes, a "brand-new piece of tech that just ran into a shortage." This time around, however, Selburn says that the technology inside both of the next-gen systems isn't groundbreaking enough to make production as difficult or time-consuming.

"They're not encountering fundamental questions about: can it be built?" Selburn said of Sony and Microsoft. As a result, he thinks any real difference in initial sales will come down to how gamers react to software policies like Microsoft's controversial online requirements ? an issue that Selburn estimates gives Sony twice the demand for the PlayStation 4 than what Microsoft now has for the Xbox One.

The 'Apple effect'?
But that doesn't mean there won't still be impatient gamers this holiday season, Melissa Otto, an analyst at TIAA-CREF, told NBC News. While all the sound and fury about having to wait a few extra weeks for a console might frustrate the individual consumer, Otto said that, from a broader perspective, it's actually great marketing.

"I'm not sure it's something they struggle with," Otto said of console manufacturers supplying enough units. "I would argue that it's actually something they create. Whenever a new console cycle begins, these companies have a tendency to limit the supply to gauge the demand and create buzz. And then once the buzz starts and the momentum kicks up, the supply continues to be limited which magnifies the value of the actual product."

It's easy to see what Otto means. Neither Sony nor Microsoft would comment specifically about their current launch plans, but both companies told NBC News that demand for their respective consoles has been strong.

"Consumer reaction to PS4 has been phenomenal," a representative from Sony told NBC News in a statement. "We will try our best to meet all demand needs, but it?s very possible that demand will outstrip supply at launch." A spokesperson for Microsoft, meanwhile, wrote in an e-mailed statement that "we are pleased with the enthusiasm consumers have shown as Xbox One preorders are trending ahead of Xbox 360 during the same time period and have sold out at most major U.S. retailers."

Other analysts agreed with Otto's assessment that Sony and Microsoft might be aiming for what she called "the Apple effect" in their statements about demand outstripping supply. But Sebastian, who still estimates that Microsoft is better equipped to turn out as many as two times more Xbox One units than Sony is prepared to release of the PlayStation 4, said that the long life-cycle of these products has always made their launches a bit more bumbling.

"I don't think the management of the supply chain is their core competency," Sebastian said.

Yannick LeJacq is a contributing writer for NBC News who has also covered technology and games for Kill Screen, The Wall Street Journal and The Atlantic. You can follow him on Twitter at @YannickLeJacq and reach him by email at: Yannick.LeJacq@nbcuni.com.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663301/s/2f39ef0a/sc/15/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Ctechnology0Cdont0Eblame0Esanta0Exbox0Eplaystation0Esupply0Eprobably0Ewont0Emeet0Edemand0E6C10A765763/story01.htm

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Alabama and Mississippi governors call for oil sands assessment

MOBILE, Ala. (AP) ? The governors of Mississippi and Alabama said Saturday their two states will partner to study oil sands resources.

Oil sands are a sandy mixture found below the surface containing bitumen. After extracting the sand, the bitumen can be transformed into crude oil that can be refined.

Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant and Alabama Gov. Robert Bentley announced the partnership Saturday while speaking to the Southern States Energy Board during a meeting in Mobile, Ala.

Republican governors signed a memorandum of understanding that commissions the assessment of oil sands in both states, according to a news release. The Southern States Energy Board will team up with various agencies from Mississippi and Alabama to conduct the study.

"As I have said before, for our nation to become more energy independent, we must recognize the importance of a forward-thinking approach to energy and continue to develop a comprehensive energy policy that works," Bryant said in a statement.

The resource is known as the Hartselle Sandstone, an underground layer that stretches from north-central and northwest Alabama into northeastern Mississippi. A recent study found an estimated 7.5 billion barrels of oil located in the reserves, the governors say.

"By taking this action, we're exploring the potential for safe and reliable development of energy right here at home," Bentley said in a statement.

Bryant said Mississippi and Alabama can learn from Canada, where the extraction of oil sands has been successful.

"Canada has proven to be a leader in oil sand recovery, and we hope through this evaluation process we can collaborate and share knowledge on best practices," Bryant said.

Source: http://blog.al.com/live/2013/07/alabama_and_mississippi_govern.html

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Blair Underwood back on TV starring in 'Ironside'

This image released by NBC shows,front tow from left, Brent Sexton, Kenneth Choi, Pablo Schreiber, Blair Underwood, Spencer Grammar and Neal Bledsoe at the "Ironside" session during the NBCUniversal Press Tour in Beverly Hills, Calif., on Saturday, July 27, 2013. (AP Photo/NBC, Chris Haston)

This image released by NBC shows,front tow from left, Brent Sexton, Kenneth Choi, Pablo Schreiber, Blair Underwood, Spencer Grammar and Neal Bledsoe at the "Ironside" session during the NBCUniversal Press Tour in Beverly Hills, Calif., on Saturday, July 27, 2013. (AP Photo/NBC, Chris Haston)

(AP) ? Blair Underwood is returning to series television in a remake of "Ironside," which shares few similarities with the original series that starred Raymond Burr.

The character's name and job as a detective is the same, and he uses a wheelchair after being paralyzed from the waist down.

The original series, set in San Francisco, ran on NBC from 1967-75. The reboot is based in New York City and filmed in Los Angeles. NBC has ordered 13 episodes of the show that debuts Oct. 2.

Underwood said he got used to the wheelchair by using one at home while learning his lines. The role is especially meaningful to him because his mother, Marilyn, is in a wheelchair as the result of multiple sclerosis.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-07-28-TV-Blair%20Underwood/id-59e805e369dd4cfa84e18edc59968cba

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Dying 'Simpsons' co-creator donating fortune

Celebs

11 hours ago

Pretty much everyone who's ever watched "The Simpsons" knows that they sprung mostly formed out of Matt Groening's head over 20 years ago ? but what they may be less familiar with is the name Sam Simon, who co-created the series. Simon left in 1993 (though he still gets an executive producer credit) to pursue other TV options and philanthropic endeavors, but as he told The Hollywood Reporter (photo from the article Tweeted by Simon below), he's about to step up giving away as much money as he can. Why? He's been diagnosed with terminal colon cancer.

The 58-year-old nine-time Emmy winner, who currently consults on "Anger Management," announced his diagnosis on Marc Maron's "WTF" podcast back in May, saying he had been told he had between three and six months to live. He also added that he would donate nearly all of his "Simpsons" royalties to charity. (He is unmarried and has no children.)

As he told THR, he had no idea money from "The Simpsons" would still be coming in 25 years later. "(It) got bigger and bigger," he said.

Simon was solidly behind many charities even before his diagnosis; he founded the Sam Simon Foundation to assist needy humans and stray dogs; he has a PETA center in Norfolk, Va. named after him; global marine conservation group Sea Shepherd Conservation Society named one of its four vessels after him ? and that's just a start.

But now, he says, "We are going to expand all this stuff (in the Sam Simon Foundation). (It) is going to be very well endowed, and there's a lot of stuff I want them to do."

As for his health, it's a day-by-day situation. He said he's still undergoing chemotherapy treatment, though he gets "every possible side effect ? fatigue, nausea ... so today and tomorrow are like, my two good days for the month. So I'm feeling pretty good today, and, you know, we shall see."

Read the full interview here.

Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/terminally-ill-simpsons-co-creator-sam-simon-giving-fortune-charity-6C10761155

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