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20 Sep 17:47

Obama administration petitions FCC to require carriers to unlock phones

by MobileNations

SIM cards

Phone unlocking to be 'expeditious and transparent,' while not affecting service contracts

The Obama administration, by way of the NTIA (National Telecommunications and Information Administration), today officially petitioned the FCC to voice its opinion that carriers should be required unlock customer's phones. The petition cuts right to the point, stating that US consumers should be able to request that their phone, tablet or other device be unlocked — and have it done free of charge and with no strings attached.

“Americans should be able to use their mobile devices on whatever networks they choose and have their devices unlocked without hassle."

Said NTIA Administrator Lawrence E. Strickling, going further to say that the burden of handling unlocking should be put on the carrier, not the users, and that the process should be "expeditious and transparent." A Library of Congress decision regarding the DMCA took the ability for consumers to legally unlock their phones last year, and this petition hopes to secure these rights outside of that act.

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20 Sep 17:34

Review: Sony VAIO Pro 11 – elegance in Ultrabook form

by MobileNations

There is no doubt that Sony’s latest Pro series of VAIO Windows 8 laptops are beautiful.  

Today we are reviewing Sony’s 11 inch model of the VAIO Pro to see if this machine is as wonderful to use as it is elegant – or maybe, beauty is only skin deep.

The post Review: Sony VAIO Pro 11 – elegance in Ultrabook form appeared first on AIVAnet.

20 Sep 17:33

Chinese 'Hidden Lynx' hackers behind major cyberattacks on US, claims Symantec

by noreply@idg.co.uk (John E Dunn)
Symantec believes it has joined the dots that connect a single Chinese hacking group dubbed ‘Hidden Lynx’ to a series of high-profile APT-driven cyberattacks on US interests, including the infamous Aurora hacks of 2009 as well as this year’s compromise of security firm Bit9.
    


20 Sep 17:30

AllThingsD: carriers indicate lower than usual iPhone 5s stock ahead of Friday’s launch

by Engadget

If last week’s announcement got you all worked up about a new Apple handset, you may have to wait a little while longer. AllThingsD reports that sources from multiple US carriers are showing “grotesquely” low inventory leading up to Friday’s iPhone 5s launch. It’s worth noting that stock numbers typically fall short of the demand (especially at the start), but it seems that this release may be even worse than year’s past. Of course, with a rainbow of other options hitting shelves on the same day, perhaps the high-end model isn’t demanding the same amount of attention this time around.

Filed under: Cellphones, Apple

Comments

Source: AllThingsD

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20 Sep 17:30

Windows Phone picks up all nine FIPS 140-2 certificates, clears path for government customers

by MobileNations

Lumia 1020 Windows Phone

Good news if you’re a Windows Phone lover and happen to work for the United States or Canadian governments. The mobile operating system you use all the time has picked up the required cryptographic modules from the US CMVP and Canadian CSEC validation programs. Details after the break.

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18 Sep 04:59

Dragons of Atlantis players boycott game, Kabam responds

by Tracey Lien

A small group of vocal players of Kabam's Dragons of Atlantis — a free-to-play browser-based and mobile strategy title — recently organized a boycott of the game in protest of changes the developer made to its balance.

The players set up a Facebook group which, at the time of writing, has 3,366 members, calling for all players to not log into the game, purchase any in-game items or perform any activities from Sept. 1 onward. Dragons of Atlantis boasts millions of players — across Kabam's portfolio of games, there have been more than 60 million downloads as of last year.

Speaking to Polygon, Kabam's VP head of global corporate communications, Steve Swasey said the studio is aware of the blackout and it has been in contact with...

Continue reading…

18 Sep 04:58

Mechwarrior Online launches with a new robot-combat trailer

by John Funk

A new launch trailer celebrates the full release of Mechwarrior Online.

The trailer shows the series' iconic battle robots like the Mad Cat and Atlas rushing into combat with missiles, lasers and cannons blazing. While there is also some in-cockpit footage and a bit that shows off the game's store and customization options, the vast majority of the video focuses on robots blowing each other up.

Mechwarrior Online can be downloaded at the game's official website.

18 Sep 04:57

Look Through The Eyes Of The Guys Who Disarm Bombs For A Living [PHOTOS]

by Geoffrey Ingersoll

Air Force EOD Bomb

Practice Practice Practice.

Kathryn Bigelow's pop-culture portrayal of military bomb techs in the movie Hurt Locker would have you erroneously believing (among other things) that the life of a bomb tech is an endless series of deployments, cowboy antics, and ditching bomb suits to "die comfortable."

The truth is that an average bomb tech might go through years of schooling and training just to "reduce" — the term they use for disarming — a bomb from a hundred yards away with the help of a robot and an XBox controller.

They've got the steady hands of a surgeon and the sharp minds of the world's best pilots.

Of course with any training, there is extensive planning.



There's also the bomb suit: weighing in at almost 100 pounds, internal cooling systems prevent total melt downs.



Along with the suit, techs carry with them an assortment of specialized tools, from wire cutters, to a basic knife, to full blown, 30 lb "iRobot 310 SUGV" man-portable bot.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider
    






18 Sep 04:56

'Doctor Who,' 'Sherlock,' and more coming to Hulu thanks to BBC deal

by Bryan Bishop

Earlier this year Hulu spent several months on the auction block, but now the company is focused on bringing more content to its customers instead. The Wall Street Journal reports that Hulu has closed a deal with BBC Worldwide North America, and will be adding 144 different BBC titles to its service in the first year of the agreement. Some of those titles include such high-profile programs as Sherlock, Doctor Who, and Luther. Over 2,000 episodes of television are included in all, and while most of them are destined for the Hulu Plus subscription service some will be available on the free portion of the site (with ads, of course). Fortunately for the streaming company's competitors, the programming is not exclusive to Hulu.

The deal...

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18 Sep 04:56

Square Enix: Final Fantasy Agito 'will definitely be localized,' Western release unconfirmed

by Samit Sarkar

Final Fantasy Agito "will definitely be localized" for the West by publisher Square Enix, although there's no confirmation yet that it will actually be released in the West, said game director Hajime Tabata in an interview with USgamer.

Square Enix announced Final Fantasy Agito last week as a free-to-play game in development on iOS and Android. It's set in the same world as its predecessor, the PlayStation Portable game Final Fantasy Type-0 (image above), which was released in Japan in October 2011. Tabata told USgamer that much of Type-0 was localized into English and other European languages, but Square Enix decided against releasing the action role-playing game in the West for logistical reasons.

A representative for Square Enix...

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18 Sep 04:56

Google invites iOS users to experience data compression with Chrome

by Engadget

Google invites iOS users to experience data compression with Chrome

Like it or not, thinking about every megabyte is essential for smartphone owners hoping to keep their monthly usage from topping whatever tier they’ve purchased. The nasty, unbecoming world of data caps isn’t changing in the near-term, and Google knows it. Following in the footsteps of Opera, the outfit’s Chrome browser for iOS is evidently equipped with a data compression feature that’s engineered to save precious bytes when browsing via mobile. This technology has existed for some time, but it’s just now being rolled out en masse to those with an iPhone. We’re told that it “compresses and minimizes HTML, JavaScript and CSS resources, removing unnecessary whitespace, comments and other metadata not essential to rendering the pages,” which can reduce data usage by up to 50 percent on certain sites. So, Apple — thinking about tossing something similar under the hood of Mobile Safari?

Filed under: Internet, Software, Mobile, Google

Comments

Source: TechCrunch

The post Google invites iOS users to experience data compression with Chrome appeared first on AIVAnet.

18 Sep 04:56

First iPhone 5c Reviews: Color is a ‘Breath of Fresh Air’, Will ‘Sell Like Hot Cakes’

by MacRumors

During its iPhone event that took place on September 10, Apple handed out a number of iPhone 5c review units to various publications. The embargo on reviews has just been lifted, which means a slew of sites are posting reactions to Apple’s colorful new phone lineup. We’ve gathered some interesting excerpts below to highlight the general reaction to the release.

iphone5c-header
David Pogue, The New York Times

The budget model, the new iPhone 5C, comes in five colors ($100 for the 16-gigabyte model with a two-year contract, $550 without). It’s essentially identical to last year’s iPhone 5, except that its back and sides are a single piece of plastic instead of metal and glass.Actually, “plastic” isn’t quite fair. The 5C’s case is polycarbonate, lacquered like a glossy piano. Better yet, its back edges are curved for the first time since the iPhones of 2008. You can tell by touch which way it’s facing in your pocket.

It’s a terrific phone. The price is right. It will sell like hot cakes; the new iPhones go on sale Friday. But just sheathing last year’s phone in shiny plastic isn’t a stunning advance.

Jim Dalrymple, The Loop

There is absolutely no give to this phone at all. It doesn’t bend or buckle anywhere in the casing, which is what you want, obviously. It feels as solid as the 5s.

The iPhone 5c doesn’t actually feel like plastic. It’s strange when you first pick it up, but it almost feels like ceramic or a similar material that is glossy and hard. The manufacturing process that Apple used to make this phone and the metal reinforcement it used in the plastic casing certainly worked on making this phone tough.

Darrell Etherington, TechCrunch

To date, Apple’s choice of materials has been one of its prime differentiating factors, at least from an aesthetics point of view, vs. the Android crop of competitors. So does dipping back into a polycarbonate shell threaten the image Apple has tried so hard to cultivate?

The answer is a resounding ‘No.’ Apple notes that the iPhone 5c is actually polycarbonate because it wanted to get the colors just right, and doing so in metal just wasn’t feasible. Further, it points out that there’s a steel frame (which doubles as an antenna) girding that polycarbonate shell, which results in a phone that feels sturdy in the hand, without the flex or perceived fragility of other plastic device designs.

Lauren Goode, AllThingsD

The iPhone 5C has the same A6 processor and the same 4-inch Retina display as the iPhone 5. Colors on the 5C’s display look warmer.

It’s just slightly thicker and heavier than the iPhone 5. And while the 5C isn’t as refined-looking as the iPhone 5 or the new 5S, it isn’t a tacky plastic phone, either. I’ve tested plastic phones before, including the Samsung Galaxy S4 and the new Moto X from Motorola, and this phone feels more solid in the hand.

Myriam Joire, Engadget

We’re not going to lie. The iPhone 5c is gorgeous – we’d even argue that it’s the most beautiful iPhone since the 4 and 4s. It instantly makes the iPhone 5 and 5s look staid in comparison.

Sure, we prefer materials like aluminum and glass over plastic, and we appreciate the intricate craftsmanship that goes into building the iPhone 5 and 5s, but still, we can’t help it – the 5c just triggers some reptilian part of our brains that screams, “OMG, color!”

Other reviews:

Anand Shimpi, AnandTech
Edward Baig, USA Today
Stuart Miles, Pocket-Lint
Luke Peters, T3
Scott Stein, CNET

Apple’s iPhone 5c is currently available for pre-order and will begin shipping on September 20.

    

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18 Sep 04:55

Mass Effect voice actor Mark Meer joins The Long Dark, gameplay detailed

by Megan Farokhmanesh

Mark Meer, the actor who voiced the male version of Mass Effect's Commander Shepard, will play protagonist William Mackenzie in Hinterland's The Long Dark, according to an update on the game's Kickstarter.

The Long Dark, announced by the newly formed studio earlier this month, is a first-person post-disaster survival sim. As Mackenzie, players attempt to live in the wilderness by foraging for resources and exploring.

"When the team at Hinterland first approached me about The Long Dark, I was immediately hooked," Meer said via the Kickstarter update. "There aren't many games that offer such an understated, yet powerful role and I knew I had to get involved."

A second update also offers details on gameplay, including The Long Dark's...

Continue reading…

17 Sep 23:22

Argentinian teen arrested over malware scam

by Dave Neal
Argentinian teen arrested over malware scam

Accused of prolific pilfering


    
17 Sep 23:21

Rich People Are Increasingly Investing In Farms And Rail Cars

by Mamta Badkar

van gogh rest from work

FA Insights is a daily newsletter from Business Insider that delivers the top news and commentary for financial advisors.

Wealthy Investors Are Increasingly Turning To Farms And Rail (Investment News)

Wealthy investors looking for income in a rising interest rate environment are increasingly turning to farms, timberland, and funds that finance rail cars, reports Investment News. "The trick in these hard assets is buying at a reasonable price," Don Heath or Regions Financial Corp.'s (RF) private wealth-management unit told Investment News. "If you buy it right and manage it right, over a long time horizon, you can realize average annualized returns in the five to 10 percent range."

Of course these "real assets" bring their own set of risks including illiquidity, natural disasters, termites etc. Some choose to invest in loan funds that lend to American businesses.

The Best Strategy For Protecting Your Portfolio From Inflation (BlackRock)

"Inflation is a fact of life" and investors should therefore have some "element of inflation protection built into a portfolio," according to Michael Fredricks and Phil Green of BlackRock. And this should be flexible and be able to adapt to changing market conditions and inflation expectations. Treasury Inflation Protected Securities (TIPS), gold, commodities, real estate and stocks are considered good inflation protection assets. 

"Ultimately, the effectiveness of single-asset-class inflation hedges can vary dramatically based on market conditions. They can introduce high volatility and their valuations can change significantly over time. A diversified, tactically managed, multi-asset portfolio seeks to exploit the best of each by understanding the drivers of a particular inflation scenario and allocating across those assets with the potential to outperform in that specific scenario (e.g., rising growth/falling inflation; rising growth/rising inflation; falling growth/falling inflation; falling growth/rising inflation). We believe this can result in better risk/return characteristics and improved inflation protection through various market cycles."

inflation assets

 

How To Think About The Stock Market In One Huge Slide (Morgan Stanley)

Screen Shot 2013 09 17 at 4.42.00 AM

It Is Important For Investors To Adopt A More Active Approach To Sector Investing (BMO Capital Markets)

In the past 40 years, rising rates have helped cyclical areas of the market, according to Brian Belski at BMO Capital Markets. This is because rising real interest rates suggest stronger economic growth.

"However, based on this data there have been some notable exceptions, namely Energy and Consumer Staples. While historical performance analysis can be insightful, it is important that investors consider valuation within this context as well. Based on our valuation composite, Discretionary, Materials, Telecom, and Utilities are extremely expensive suggesting that these sectors are likely to underperform historical performance patterns. By contrast, Energy and Health Care are very inexpensive increasing the likelihood of outperforming historical performance patterns.

"This is important because our three Overweight sectors – Financials, Industrials, and Technology – have been among the top performers historically during periods of rising real interest rates and is another reason we remain committed to these sectors. However, as stock correlations have fallen, it is also important for investors to adopt a more active approach to sector investing."

Advisors Need To Help Clients Before Their Cognitive Decline (The Wall Street Journal)

In a new WSJ column, Ted Beck CEO of Denver-based The National Endowment for Financial Education, a non-profit focused on financial education, writes that advisors should have a conversation with their clients about cognitive decline and finances early on. While it can be a touchy subject, advisors should help their clients figure out who will manage their finances and make decisions for them, when they no longer can. 

Beck suggests that advisors "consolidate their accounts" because "it becomes easy for family members to know where the assets are located if the client passes away or becomes cognitively impaired." It is important to keep family members informed about the decisions that are made.

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17 Sep 23:20

How An Infection Turned A Man's Guts Into A Beer-Brewing Machine

by Jennifer Welsh

beerA 61-year-old Texas man developed an infection in his gut that reportedly turned the sugars and starches he ate into ethanol, getting him drunk.

"He would get drunk out of the blue — on a Sunday morning after being at church, or really, just anytime," Barabara Cordell, the dean of nursing at Panola College in Carthage, Texas, told NPR's The Salt. "His wife was so dismayed about it that she even bought a Breathalyzer."

The condition is known as gut fermentation syndrome, or Auto-Brewery Syndrome. The man showed up at the hospital reporting dizziness and with a blood alcohol level of 0.37 — enough to kill a person.

That's according to the report from the International Journal of Clinical Medicine. He was likely infected with the yeast from something he ate or drank — which could have been compounded by the fact he dabbled in home-brewing and likely had plenty of live yeast around the house.

This isn't the first time this syndrome has shown up — it's been seen a few dozen times under different names. That doesn't mean you have to fear the yeast in your home brew kit. Nor should you swallow it in hopes of making your own gut-brew.

The yeast will just slip through the intestines of healthy people without lodging in there. Each case seems to follow a round of antibiotics, which kills off the local, healthy bacteria leaving a space for the yeast to grow.

Now, that's a beer gut.

Thanks to NPR for pointing out the case study. You can find more on it there.

SEE ALSO: Here's What 9,000-Year-Old Beers Taste Like

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17 Sep 23:20

Why Clever And Lazy People Make The Best Leaders

by Farnam Street

Germans Nazis WWI soldiers

“You’re looking for three things, generally, in a person,” says Warren Buffett. “Intelligence, energy, and integrity. And if they don’t have the last one, don’t even bother with the first two.”

Ideally you want all three but people don’t always cooperate. These qualities tend to be difficult to judge in hiring someone.

So we end up with all sorts of combinations and permutations in organizations.

A lot of people feel that stupid people are the ‘worst’ problem. (I’d argue that intelligent people without integrity are even worse. They know the system, play politics well, and often end up in grey areas.) With or without integrity, it’s easier to get rid of an unintelligent person than an intelligent one.

Simplifying greatly (and removing integrity from the equation), we end up with four combinations: stupid and hard-working, stupid and lazy, intelligent and hard-working, and intelligent and lazy.

So what happens with smart lazy people?

* * *

Erich von Manstein, one of the top strategists in Hitler’s German Military, described Kurt Gebhard Adolf Philipp Freiherr von Hammerstein-Equord, the former Commander-in-Chief of the Reichswehr as “… probably one of the cleverest people I ever met.*”

Both men, according to Ben Breen, are widely credited with the following quote that gets to the heart of the matter.

I divide my officers into four groups. There are clever, diligent, stupid, and lazy officers. Usually two characteristics are combined. Some are clever and diligent — their place is the General Staff. The next lot are stupid and lazy — they make up 90 percent of every army and are suited to routine duties. Anyone who is both clever and lazy is qualified for the highest leadership duties, because he possesses the intellectual clarity and the composure necessary for difficult decisions. One must beware of anyone who is stupid and diligent — he must not be entrusted with any responsibility because he will always cause only mischief.

* * *

This actually makes quite a bit of sense to me.

Stupid and Lazy
You can accommodate unintelligent and lazy people by separating work into chunks. We do this all the time by breaking jobs down into routine tasks, creating policies and procedures that remove any need of judgment.

(My guess is this happens eventually in every organization because at some point the response to consistently poor judgement calls is to create a bureaucratic process/policy that attempts to remove that error.) It’s all very McDonald’s like and these people tend to be easily replaceable.

Stupid and Energetic
von Hammerstein-Equord recognized these people cause “nothing but mischief.” To him, they should be fired immediately. I tend to agree. Despite good intentions, they often create more work for others.

Intelligent and Energetic
You want these people around. I’m guessing that von Hammerstein-Equord thought they’d be fit for middle management. Which makes sense. I imagine he saw them as company men: safe, reliable, rule following.

He likely saw them as people who didn’t challenge authority or speak up. I think this is a bit of a leap; I know plenty of hard working smart people who, occasionally, challenge authority. I think this happens for a few reasons. Perhaps they’ve grown too frustrated with what they see as absurdity. Or perhaps, and this is more likely, they put away ambitions of climbing the corporate ladder. (Depending on your organization, smart and unquestioning can be the easiest way to a promotion.)

Intelligent and Lazy
An under-appreciated aspect of today’s workforce that von Hammerstein-Equord thought fit to lead “because he possesses the intellectual clarity and the composure necessary for difficult decisions.”

These people can be challenging to work with. They delegate and trust people to do their jobs. They don’t micromanage; they question. They avoid unproductive things (think meetings, paper shuffling, busy work). They don’t seek consensus because often that means more work, not less. They focus on a few key priorities. They don’t run around with solutions looking for problems.

Often they have no desire to ‘move up’ in an organization. This gives them the freedom to be different.

Maybe von Hammerstein-Equord was onto something.

Considering the framework above, it’s interesting to contemplate the consequences of mismatching types and jobs.

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17 Sep 23:17

Air Force Chief Of Staff Gives Brief While Wearing Captain America Mask

by Geoffrey Ingersoll

Chief of Staff Air Force

The Air Force Tweeted out an Instagram image of the Air Force Chief of Staff Mark A. Welsh wearing a Captain America mask during a brief today.

Military Times also posted its own image of Welsh, who was talking at the Air Force Association’s Annual Air & Space Conference and Technology Exposition.

Consequently, a few commenters on the Instagram account called the mask "creepy" and noted that "the regs" (regulations) probably don't allow for masks in uniform.

Military Times reported: "Pointing to the ‘A,’ he said, 'A is for Airpower.'"

To the contrary though, Business Insider's own Paul Szoldra rightly noted that Captain America was in the Army, not the Air Force.

"Creepy" or not, generals of his rank can do stuff like this.

He was probably just having fun, morale is always a consideration — though if he shows up to give a brief in a Wookie mask anytime soon, people should ask questions.

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17 Sep 23:15

CDC REPORT: 'We Will Soon Be In A Post-Antibiotic Era'

by Agence France Presse

mask

At least two million people per year in the United States get infections that are resistant to antibiotics and 23,000 die from those infections, a new study says.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said these numbers are only a conservative estimate. Among other reasons, they come only from infections reported in hospitals and do not address ones that occur in nursing homes and other health care facilities.

The numbers underline the importance of not overusing antibiotics.

In as many as half of the cases studied, antibiotic use was not necessary or was even inappropriate, such as in viral infections, for instance, the researchers said.

The report also warns against the danger of running short on effective treatments against infection while the number of new antibiotics being developed fails to meet short-term needs.

"If we're not careful, we will soon be in a post antibiotic era," CDC director Tom Frieden said.

"And, in fact, for some patients and some microbes, we are already there. Losing effective treatment will not only undermine our ability to fight routine infections, but also have serious complications, serious implications, for people who have other medical problems," he said.

Most of the 18 microbes included in the study are common, and were divided into three categories depending on their degree of risk: urgent, concerning and important.

Within the urgent group, there are three of particular interest: they are called carbapenem-resistant enterobacteriaceae, C. difficile, and drug-resistant gonorrhea, he said.

The first of those is a "nightmare bacteria" that can essentially resist all antibiotics and kill people who get it in their blood.

C. difficile is a life-threatening infection associated with 14,000 deaths and a quarter of a million hospitalizations per year.

As for gonorrhea, there are more than 800,000 infections in the United States each year, with a growing proportion resistant to all available medication.

The way to fight all this is to prevent infection and the spread of resistance, through immunization, safe food preparation and hand washing, the CDC said.

Copyright (2013) AFP. All rights reserved.

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17 Sep 23:15

4 Traits That Make Up Every Great Leader

by Vivian Giang

James Caan

There are many different leadership styles, but all great leaders have similar traits, according to serial entrepreneur James Caan's post on LinkedIn.

Caan says that leadership is a hard concept to define and only through hard work and experience can you acquire the necessary skills you need to effectively lead others.

Below, he describes four traits ever great leader has:

1. You must have confidence.

Caan says: "As a decision maker or chief executive you should never forget that all the people you manage are constantly looking to you for inspiration and guidance and setting an example is a major part of the job description. There is of course a very big difference between confidence and arrogance, and it is important not to cross that line."

2. You must be business-saavy.

"Knowing what course of action to take in any given situation is a great skill to be able to draw on," he says. "The ability to react in the right way to changing circumstances is something that usually comes with many years of experience."

3. You must be able to make decisions.

"It is easy to lead when things are going well and a business is running smoothly. However, the true test of leadership is when an unexpected crisis rears its head," says Caan.

4. You must know your employees.

"Any good manager needs to be able to understand what makes their people tick and what motivates them," he writes. "This also helps to build staff loyalty which is a crucial element of running a business."

"Not all of us can be leaders, and there are plenty of people who are happy not to be, but it would be foolish to think that leadership is an easy skill to master," says Caan.

Want your business advice featured in Instant MBA? Submit your tips to tipoftheday@businessinsider.com. Be sure to include your name, your job title, and a photo of yourself in your email.

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17 Sep 23:14

Naptha Is The Key Ingredient For A Saudi Petrochemicals Boom

by The Economist

saudi king abdullah salman bin abdel aziz

Although plans are well advanced for constructing one of the world's biggest combined cycle petrochemicals plants in the kingdom, being built by the Sadara Chemical Company (a joint venture between the state oil company, Saudi Aramco, and Dow Chemical of the US), in reality the petrochemicals sector has mostly taken a back seat in the country's rapid industrialisation of recent years. This is primarily due to the shortage of ethane-rich associated gas and natural gas liquids (NGLs), which are both linked to crude oil production. However, this may well change if a new strategy planned by Saudi Aramco bears fruit.

In an indication of the new approach, Saudi Aramco and a joint-venture partner, France's Total, are planning to carry out a feasibility study in October to expand the 400,000 barrel/day heavy-oil refinery at Jubail in Eastern Province that was started up just last week. The expansion is strategic not just for both companies, but also for the kingdom at large, as it will serve as a litmus test for producing significantly higher volumes of naphtha either to partly offset or to replace in full the use of natural gas or natural gas liquids as feedstock for petrochemical products.

Naptha the key to new petrochemicals capacity

Undoubtedly, for the past few years the biggest stumbling block for building a downstream hydrocarbons industry has been the availability of feedstock gas. However, an expansion of the Jubail refinery could throw up options for Aramco to extract naphtha from that facility-which could in turn be supplied for new multi-feed crackers.

A multi-feed cracker is a facility that can operate using either ethane-rich gas or naphtha as feedstock. The first such facility in the Middle East is being built by the Sadara Chemical Company for its chemical plant at Jubail Industrial City. This will soon be followed a similar facility in Qatar, being built in a joint venture between Qatar Petroleum and Royal Dutch Shell for their olefins project at Ras Laffan.

Besides emerging as a new feedstock source, the use of naphtha will result in yet another benefit that is more commercial in nature: compared with a natural gas/NGL cracker, a naphtha cracker can produce a much greater variety of chemicals, such as ethylene, propylene, butadiene, and a full slate of aromatics such as benzene, toluene and mixed xylene.

Aramco has labelled its new programme as "downstream refinery integration", and the expectation is that after Jubail, Aramco will start similar projects for the Yanbu, Jizan and Ras Tanura refineries. Reinforcing this expectation, Aramco and the Saudi Basic Industries Corporation (SABIC) have already selected Yanbu, Ras Tanura and Jizan Economic City as the new locations where they will invest first in infrastructure to create a platform for both private Saudi and international players to invest in new facilities. The three sites are already home to crude oil refineries, providing easy access to feedstock.

Feasibility study should point the way

The Aramco-Total feasibility study should indicate the volumes of naphtha that can be "stripped out" of an expanded Jubail refinery, and, if the report is positive, Fluor of the US and Australia-based WorleyParsons have indicated that there may well be potential to build at least six new world-scale crackers, each with a capacity of some 2m tonnes/year. That figure could increase further, if Aramco's efforts to tap into the kingdom's shale gas resources are successful, and also if non-associated gas is discovered in the Red Sea and the Western region where an exploration and drilling programme is currently under way.

Aramco and Total are already in talks with the Dow Chemical Company to sell the naphtha it plans to produce from the expanded Jubail refinery, while the local Farabi Petrochemicals Company has already showed its willingness to invest at least US$10bn in several "ancillary" projects that could use naphtha to produce rubber, detergents and soaps, as well as other exotic chemicals. The enormous interest in the sector reflects optimism over likely healthy rates of return, reflecting expected high rates of demand growth for downstream products not just in Asia, but also in the Gulf Co-operation Council (GCC) region where the population is increasingly rapidly.

However, one obstacle remains to realising this potential: the need to raise the existing fixed gas price of 75 US cents/m Btu. According to Platts, naphtha prices averaged about US$621/tonne, the equivalent of about US$3.2/m Btu, in the first six months of 2013, and, as a result, if these new naptha conversion plants are to be economically viable, a gas price better reflecting the market rate will be required. However, if a higher price can be implemented, the resulting rise in petrochemicals output would help to mitigate, to a degree, the decline in demand for Saudi crude in North America, owing to rising shale oil output in North America. In addition, by moving towards a naphtha-based petrochemical industry, natural gas would be freed up for reinjection into Saudi Arabia's older oilfields, allowing them to maintain higher levels of output for longer.

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17 Sep 18:55

Here's What You Should Do If You're In Public And Bullets Start To Fly

by Geoffrey Ingersoll

Gunfire Swat NavyYou’re in public, minding your business, on your way to work — and gunshots ring out.

This rare, but terrifying scenario is something that all of us should consider with the prevalence of mass shootings in modern times.

There have been five in the U.S. just this year alone, not to mention the staggering number of gun deaths in America.

So here are immediate actions you can take to ensure your survival, which I learned during my time as a U.S. Marine.

Don’t freak out. Don't scream. Stay calm.

1. Hit The Deck!

This seems like common sense. Matter of fact, all of these will seem like common sense. But you wouldn't believe how many people hear gunfire in a public place and just stand around, heads all in the air, bewildered, looking this way and that.

Get low!

The first thing you need to do is remove your dome from the where the bullets will be. So ... lower it.



2. Don't Scream

If you find yourself in a situation like this, keep your mouth shut. The last thing you want to do is make the shooter notice you.

That includes talking on your cell phone—stay off of it, especially if you're in a city or other populated public place, where people who are within earshot but outside the danger zone can call the police.

Authorities might even be on the spot.

So don't yell, don't talk. Stay quiet.



3. Conceal Yourself

Seems like common sense, right?

But again, some people will sit well within sight of a perpetrator. Put something in between you and the shooter, preferably something that blocks his sight completely, but anything that offers a bit of misdirection (like tall grass) will help.

If he can't see you, he'll have trouble shooting you.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider
    






17 Sep 18:55

35-Year-Old Man Gets Hundreds Of Girls To Strip For Him On Webcam By Posing As Justin Bieber

by Pamela Engel

Robert Hunter

A 35-year-old British man was sentenced to 14 years in jail after he pleaded guilty to convincing minors to send him sexual videos sometimes by posing as Justin Bieber online, according to BBC News.

Police reportedly found 800 illicit videos in Robert Hunter's possession. He targeted hundreds of underage girls and boys from all over the world.

Hunter used Facebook, Skype, and MSN to communicate with the young victims, according to Sky News.

Prosecutor Richard Bennett told the British publication Metro that Hunter hid his age while talking to his victims and that "as a further demonstration of the naivete and innocence of his victims, he was also able to persuade some that he was the music artist Justin Bieber."

He reportedly told the young girls, posing as Bieber, that he would be their boyfriend if they stripped for him, BBC reported.

Hunter also posed as a teenage girl to lure young boys into performing sex acts on camera, according to Bennett. He then used those videos to lure more girls.

Judge Peter Bowers called the crimes a "sadistic exploitation over a number of years preying on girls' naivety who were undermined by their own behavior."

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17 Sep 18:55

Aerial Photos Show Colorado's Astonishing Transformation After Flooding

by Dina Spector

Floodwaters have ravaged a Connecticut-size area of Colorado, killing at least seven people, destroying thousands of homes, and blocking hundreds of roads and bridges.

Colorado's Front Range, a 415-square-mile expanse and gateway to Rocky Mountain National Park has been completely transformed by flooding, caused by unusually heavy showers over several days.

The aerial photos below so the extent of the damage and the long road ahead.

Colorado Flooding

ColoradoColorado Flooding

Colorado Flooding

Colorado Flooding

Colorado Flooding

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SEE ALSO: One Chart Shows How Horrendous The Flooding Is In Colorado

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17 Sep 18:54

Maybe Occupy Wall Street Wasn't Such A Failure After All

by Aaron Taube

Bill de Blasio

The Occupy Wall Street movement began two years ago today with protests in lower Manhattan's Zuccotti Park.

One year on, the movement was was widely deemed a failure. Two years on, we may be seeing delayed success.

On the first anniversary of the protests, The New York Times' Joe Nocera declared the movement all but dead. The protest sought to draw attention to rising economic inequality in America and the role its supporters say Wall Street banks played in perpetuating the problem.

Echoing a popular critique of the movement, Nocera said the protestors failed to create political change, or even to state the political remedies they sought, before police removed them from the park two months after they had arrived.

"...Raising the issue is the easy part," Nocera wrote. "The hard part is doing something about it. Without political engagement by those who want to reverse income inequality, it will continue to widen."

But today is time to reconsider this assessment. While it's true that the loose collection of left-wing protestors has not coalesced behind individual candidates in the manner of OWS' right-wing counterpart, the Tea Party, the movement's success in creating heightened awareness of income inequality and stoking populist anger toward Wall Street is beginning to pay dividends.

In no place has this success been more apparent than the race to succeed Wall Street champion Mike Bloomberg as mayor of New York City. After a Democratic primary campaign that served in large part as a referendum on Bloomberg's three terms as the city's chief executive, the nomination ultimately went to NYC public advocate Bill de Blasio, whose "Tale of Two Cities" campaign focused extensively on New York's widening gap between the rich and poor.

In banging the drum for higher taxes on the wealthy, de Blasio latched on to an anger that may have been simmering, but had yet to catch fire before Occupy Wall Street launched its attacks on the so-called "one percent" two years ago and brought income inequality to the forefront of the national debate.

At a rally leading up to last week's Democratic primary elections, de Blasio supporters chanted "we are the 99 percent!" in a declaration of class solidarity that had not yet expressed itself until OWS gave people a vernacular with which to describe their frustrations and a target at which to direct them.

It remains to be seen whether de Blasio can deflect claims of "class warfare" and triumph over Republican nominee Joe Lhota in the general election, but his primary victory alone is music to the ears of a liberal base starving for a progressive mayor.

On a national level, Occupy Wall Street's patron saint, Senator Elizabeth Warren, played a small but tangible role in Goldman Sachs alumnus Larry Summers' decision to rescind his name from consideration for Federal Reserve chair. Warren was one of four Democrats on the Senate Banking Committee whose expected opposition to Summers' confirmation made the process unpalatable to President Barack Obama, a fan of Summers and his crisis-management skills.

Summers' withdrawal is seen as a victory for economic progressives, many of whom feared his ties to Wall Street and focus on the inflation rate would make him an inadequate leader to address the nation's unemployment problems.

Summers had many detractors, both on the Senate Banking Committee and beyond, and it would be inaccurate to say he'd have been named Federal Reserve chairman were it not for Warren's intervention. But Warren's place on the committee allowed her to bring the concerns of the voters who supported her anti-Wall Street campaign to a major economic policy discussion.

It's true Occupy Wall Street hasn't achieved the tidal wave of legislative change the Tea Party was able to create, but a seat at the table is certainly a start. Maybe it's time we stop calling it a failure.

SEE ALSO: Okay, Mr. President, Now Nominate Janet Yellen Already

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17 Sep 18:54

The Designs For The 2016 Olympic Park In Rio De Janeiro Look Spectacular

by Tony Manfred

Architecture firm AECOM released some artist renderings for the 2016 Olympic Park that its designing for the Rio de Janeiro games.

The park will consist of seven sports venues and an open entertainment area that can fit 12,000 people. It'll be constructed on a peninsula that juts out into the Atlantic that used to be the site of an F1 racetrack.

These are just mock-ups, but it looks great:

rio 2016 olympic park night

rio olympic park

rio oympic park walkway

rio 2016 olympic park day

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17 Sep 18:53

'Keeperswerk' masseur nekt club

Een masseur van een Braziliaanse vierde divisieclub heeft de voetbalvereniging een slechte dienst bewezen. Toen een speler van de bezoekende club de keeper van Aparacidense had omspeeld, kwam de masseur achter het doel vandaan en stopte tot twee keer toe een schot.

Woedende spelers van tegenstander Tupi wilden de masseur te lijf gaan, maar hij werd gered door de politie, die hem arresteerde. Maar daar bleef het niet bij. Aparacidense is door de Braziliaanse voetbaltuchtraad voor het hele seizoen uit de competitie genomen en masseur Romildo da Silva mag 24 wedstrijden niet op of rond het veld verschijnen en krijgt bovendien een boete van 250 dollar.

De wedstrijd was overigens een bekerduel en de tuchtraad heeft beslist dat Tupi naar de volgende ronde mag. Aparacidense neemt daar geen genoegen mee en gaat in beroep.

17 Sep 18:52

Killer app: why do anonymous Q&A networks keep leading to suicides?

by Casey Newton

Teens bullied through an anonymous question-and-answer site. A spate of suicides among the young people who used it. Growing outrage, sensational headlines, and eventual government intervention. This is the story of the quickly expanding Ask.fm over the past month — but just a couple years earlier, it was also the story of Formspring.

The fast-growing social network Ask.fm came under fire last month after the suicide of British teenager Hannah Smith, whose father attributed her death in part to bullying she endured from anonymous users. British prime minister David Cameron called for a boycott, calling the website “vile.” Advertisers pulled out, and Ask.fm introduced a host of changes, including a site-wide button for reporting...

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17 Sep 18:52

World of Tanks tournament to include veteran charity donations

by Megan Farokhmanesh

The GeForce eSports World of Tanks 3v3 Tournament Amateur Division will include cash and hardware donations to veteran charities, NVIDIA announced today.

The tournament finals will take place on Nov. 11 — Veteran's Day — and feature 128 teams battling for a $1 million in-game prize pool. World of Tanks creator Wargaming.net and NVIDIA will match up to $5,000 each as a "dollar for dollar" amount for every registrant, totaling $10,000. Gaming systems outfitted with GeForce GTX equipment will also be donated to veterans' charity hospitals.

Featured charities will be announced when play kicks off Oct. 7. Registration is open now and will close Oct. 4.

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17 Sep 18:51

Blizzard removing gold and real-money auction houses from Diablo 3

by Alexa Ray Corriea

Blizzard will remove the gold and real-money auction houses from Diablo 3 because the feature undermined the title's core gameplay mechanics of destroying enemies for gear and rewards, according to a post from the game's production director John Hight on Battle.net.

Hight noted that the developers feel that taking the auction houses offline, as well as the move to the new Loot 2.0 system, will help create a "much more rewarding game experience."

"When we initially designed and implemented the auction houses, the driving goal was to provide a convenient and secure system for trades," reads the post. "But as we've mentioned on different occasions, it became increasingly clear that despite the benefits of the [auction house] system and...

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