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10 Sep 11:28

WoW: Siege of Orgrimmar video covers all the new content in Patch 5.4

by John Funk

A new video from Blizzard introduces all the new content to come in its next major game update to World of Warcraft: Mists of Pandaria, Patch 5.4 — The Siege of Orgrimmar.

The headline feature of Patch 5.4 is the titular raid instance, in which members of the Alliance and Horde alike seek to invade the Orcish capital city of Orgrimmar and remove the renegade Warchief Garrosh Hellscream from power. The Siege of Orgrimmar starts in the ruined Vale of Eternal Blossoms and ends in a labyrinthine base underneath Ragefire Chasm, which is coincidentally the lowest-level instanced dungeon in the game.

Patch 5.4 introduces another difficulty setting for raids alongside this newest one. "Flex" raiding is meant to be a median point between the...

10 Sep 11:27

Apple Is Tweaking Its App Store Rankings Algorithm To Reward Good Ratings

by John Heggestuen

Mobile Insights is a daily newsletter from BI Intelligence delivered first thing every morning exclusively to BI Intelligence subscribers. Sign up for a free trial of BI Intelligence today.


Apple Is Tweaking Its App Store Rankings Algorithm (Juniper)
It's still difficult for consumers to find what they want in the app stores. But Apple seems to be trying to tweak its rankings algorithm in order to reward quality and help users find good apps. Juniper draws on reports from several app analytics firms and concludes that two major changes have been made: 1) A four-star ranking now seems to be virtually a requirement to break into the top 1,000, meaning that ratings are now weighed and 2) Apple now updates its rankings every three hours, far less frequently than it once did, in order to punish apps that try to climb in the rankings by using bots to drive download surges. Read > 

Amazon Says It Won't Launch a Phone This Year (Jessica Lessin)
Also, when it comes, Amazon's handset won't be a free phone, according to the article. Many analysts speculated that Amazon would launch a free or near-free heavily subsidized handset to boost its content distribution business. Read > 

China's Middle-Range Smartphone Buyers Will Buy A $350 iPhone (Business Insider)
Business Insider's Jay Yarow argues that analysts have it wrong when they say that Apple's rumored 5C smartphone would be too expensive for Chinese consumers if it's priced above $300. He quotes China smartphone market analysts who say that price range is firmly in the Chinese middle-range. Read > 

Instagram Says Ads Are Coming Next Year (WSJ)
Emily White, director of business operations, said that the 150 million-user social network will begin selling ad space within the next year. The company may experience some backlash from it users who currently enjoy ad-free newsfeeds. Read>

Vodafone Will Boost Its 4G Network With All That Verizon Cash (Juniper)
$10 billion from the Verizon acquisition of Verizon Wireless will be allocated to Vodafone's 4G Network fund, Project Spring.  The majority of this will be used to increase 4G coverage to 90% in the company's five largest markets. Read > 

OEM SmartphonesSamsung Gains 2.1 Percentage Points In The U.S. Smartphone Market (ComScore)
In July, Samsung had a 24.1% share of U.S. smartphone subscribers. This is up 2.1 points (9.5%) from April. Apple still leads the market with a 40.4% market share. Read >

New Roaming Charge Ban Could Cost Carriers $9 Billion (Guardian)
A leaked draft legislation set to be published by the European Commission next week proposes to ban roaming charges in Europe. This would force carriers to adopt a flat rate for service at home and abroad. It would also force carriers to form partnerships in areas where they do not own a network. Read more > 

The NSA Spends $250 million A Year To Weaken Networks (Guardian)
The NSA has been using taxpayer money to weaken network security according to internal documents released by Glenn Greenwald. Read > 

Millennialmedia

iOS Responsible For 60% Of Impressions In The Asia Pacific (Millennial Media)
Year-over-year iOS impressions grew in the Asia-Pacific by 11 percentage points to 34%. This is in contrast to Android which lost 4 points. But Android still leads in the region with 60% of all impressions. Read more >  

Mobile Checkout Improvements That Increase Conversions (NoPorkPies)
Check out this list of tips from No Pork Pies on how to optimize mobile checkouts to improve conversion rates: 

1. Minimize the amount of forms in your checkout 

2. Break checkouts into simple stages

3. Make checkout progress visual

4. Add "back" buttons for easy information editing

5. Optimize the checkout screen for touchscreens 

6. Don't make registration a necessity. Add a "guest checkout" option

7. Include quick payment options like PayPal, Google Wallet, and Amazon Checkout

8. Get rid of all unnecessary content — it is just a distraction

9. Boost credibility by including security reassurances

10. If you offer in-store pickup include geolocation so users can find the nearest location

11. Make sure your checkout loads lightening fast

Read > 

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10 Sep 11:25

If You're Still Unimpressed With Bitcoin Wait Until You See This Bitcoin ATM

by Dylan Love

robocoin

RoboCoin is a digital kiosk that lets its customers buy and sell Bitcoin for cash. For all intents and purposes, it's a Bitcoin ATM.

Brothers Mark and John Russell of Las Vegas are the brains of the operation, having already run a software company that builds software powering more conventional ATMs. Russell was already an avid Bitcoiner, so building a Bitcoin ATM was just a natural extension of what they were already doing.

Here's how it works. You put your cash deposit into the machine and either it tell it to generate a digital Bitcoin wallet for you and put your money there, or give the machine a preexisting wallet address for depositing your coins. It will print a QR code as a receipt of your transaction. About 10 minutes later, the Bitcoin network will push your transaction through, giving you access to your new Bitcoins.

If you want cash for your Bitcoins, bring your QR code back to a RoboCoin kiosk, scan it, and watch as it dispenses your physical money. Bitcoin to cash instantly, cash to Bitcoin almost instantly (consider the three- or four-day waiting period).

The Glasers don't intend to operate the RoboCoins themselves, but will instead sell the devices to operating partners for $18,500 (the price will later rise to $20,000). It's not clear where the brothers foresee the ATMs being placed. Those who buy the kiosks will have to be smart when it comes to following financial regulations. These ATMs are essentially a money-launderer's dream come true, but that's hardly the point here. Where Bitcoin likely feels intractable for some, RoboCoin brings it into the physical world. Suddenly we're dealing with Bitcoin right in front of us in terms that we understand – it's just like any ATM you've used a thousand times before. It simply builds a bridge between digital and physical currency.

The first RoboCoin kiosk will open later this year in Vancouver and will spread quickly thereafter, according to the plan. The Glasers tell us there's already plenty of interest. Check out the video below to see what a sample transaction looks like:

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10 Sep 11:25

The Advice That Changed One Entrepreneur's Life: 'Being Comfortable Is The Enemy'

by Max Nisen

Rotman 2

After years of working and succeeding at other people's advertising companies, in 1996 Sara Rotman decided that it was finally time to strike out on her own.

The name of her business, MODCo (short for My Own Damn Company), says a lot about why she needed to be her own boss. "I don’t mind working a thousand hours a week, but I do not suffer arbitrary rules lightly," Rotman told Forbes. She also had a core belief, common to most hard-charging entrepreneurs, that she could build something better than the people she'd been working for.

It wasn't always easy. In the beginning, Rotman worked out of her living room. She had no outside funding and just enough cash flow to cover rent and spaghetti.

Now, 17 years later, MODCo brings in $90 million a year in revenue and has clients including Vera Wang, True Religion, Century 21, and Tory Burch. It's also the only fashion advertising agency owned and run solely by a woman.

The struggle to start up and survive on your own is part of what defines every small-business owner. We asked Rotman about the lessons she learned and challenges she faced along the way that have stuck with her to today.

Her core advice to other small-business owners as they grow? Always stay hungry, and be confident enough to trust your instincts.

What's the best advice you've ever gotten?

"The best advice I ever received was from my first accountant when I was discussing the launch of my company. We were speaking about my business plan and how much money to borrow to launch. She wisely said, 'Only have enough cash on hand to barely survive; never so much that you are comfortable. It's important to stay scared in the beginning.'

While I prefer to describe that feeling as staying hungry rather than scared, I thought it was indeed great advice, and I have found this hunger to be an incredibly important motivator during my entire career. Being comfortable is the enemy. Staying hungry forces you to push yourself to continue to survive, grow, and evolve."

What's your biggest regret?

"Yikes, that's tough ... My regrets are tied to not trusting my instincts as I come up to speed on new concepts. This was especially true as I became more of a manager. I've had moments when I felt uncomfortable with the way in which responsibilities I had delegated to new members of my staff were being handled.

At the time, I was new to management and ignored the nagging feeling in my gut that things weren't being handled in an appropriate manner — or the way that I would like to see them handled. Because of my lack of experience as a manager myself, I tried to let the new team do their job, even though I suspected it wasn't the best way it could be done. That said, I learned the hard way to trust my instincts, and I do regret not having the faith in myself earlier on to do so. I am now very careful to listen to my gut and make swifter decisions about the things that set off my alarms."

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10 Sep 05:29

Majesco reports continuing decline in revenue for third quarter

by Samit Sarkar

Majesco Entertainment's woes continued with lackluster results for the third quarter of its 2013 fiscal year, including a 56 percent year-over-year drop in net revenue from $9.1 million to $4 million, the company announced today.

Due to a light product release slate for the three-month period ending July 31, Majesco recorded an operating loss of $3.6 million, the same as in the year-ago quarter. The company's net loss worsened from $3.1 million in Q3 2012 to $3.6 million in Q3 2013.

Majesco's net revenue is also down significantly for the fiscal year so far. During the first three quarters of Majesco's 2012 fiscal year, the company saw net revenue of $105.7 million; that total is $37.2 million this year, a 65 percent decrease. The...

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10 Sep 05:28

More Incoming Harvard Students Have Cheated On Their Homework Than Have Had Sex

by Peter Jacobs

Harvard University Widener Library

Last week, we brought you 10 of the most interesting facts about Harvard's newest students, but we wanted to do a deeper look at one of the most intriguing topics: the sex lives of Harvard students.

Bloomberg points out a potentially revealing comparison between two figures in the Harvard Crimson's survey of the Class of 2017 — only 35% of Harvard's newest students have had sex, while 42% admit to having cheated on homework.

While cheating is a problem that is currently causing a stir at Harvard, the details of these students' sex lives become even more interesting when examining them in the context of their four years at college.

Looking at numbers from the past few years of the Crimson's outgoing senior survey, approximately 70% of Harvard students graduate having had sex — double the 35% entering this year who have done so. Put a different way, around 575 Harvard freshmen virgins will have had sex by the time graduation arrives.

Additionally, these numbers show that 25% of Harvard students will have sex with only one person in college, while 30% of Harvard men and 20% of Harvard women will have sex with more than five people during their years in Cambridge.  

However, for those non-virgins in the class, the Crimson reports, "Men were more likely than women, private school students more likely than public school students, and Jews more likely than any other religious group to report having had sex before they arrived on campus."

The groups that were least likely to have had sex before Harvard included Mormons, home-schooled students, and incoming freshmen questioning their sexuality.

Males, on average, reportedly had more sexual partners than females did—1.95 for the former and 1.70 for the latter. However, the Crimson seems to apply some healthy skepticism to the new class' sex lives, as, "Seven men claimed to have had sex with 10 or more people, but were excluded from the averages of sexual partners."

For the most adventurous in Cambridge, around 13% of the Class of 2017 will have sex in Harvard's Widener library — one part of the "Big Three" trifecta of illicit tasks to complete before graduation.

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10 Sep 05:28

We're About To Have A Blitz Of Six Obama Interviews On Syria — Here's Your Viewer's Guide

by Brett LoGiurato

Barack Obama PBS

President Barack Obama is about to embark on an unprecedented media drive to sell his plan for military action in Syria, in response to an alleged chemical-weapons attack last month launched by President Bashar al-Assad against his own people.

Each interview will be about seven minutes long. Here's a quick guide for when each interview will air:

  • CNN: 6 p.m., with anchor Wolf Blitzer on "The Situation Room."
  • PBS: 6 p.m., with Gwen Ifill on "PBS NewsHour."
  • Fox News: 6 p.m., with anchor Chris Wallace on "Special Report."
  • CBS: Anchor Scott Pelley, who is conducting the interview, tweeted that excerpts of the interview will air during the network's coverage of the U.S. Open men's final between Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal. It will air in full during "CBS Evening News" on the West Coast.
  • ABC: 6:30 p.m., with anchor Diane Sawyer during "ABC World News."
  • NBC: 6:30, with anchor Savannah Guthrie during "NBC Nightly News."

The networks' order of interviewing Obama was determined by a drawing from a hat. NBC won the drawing, and was followed by CNN, CBS, Fox News, ABC and PBS.

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09 Sep 19:12

LOST CHILDHOOD: Haunting Photos Of 10-Year-Old Boy Working In A Syrian Weapons Factory

by Paul Szoldra

In the two-year-old Syrian civil war, it's easy to lose sight of how ordinary civilians are suffering amid the heated debate on both sides of a possible U.S. intervention in the conflict.

No matter what the international community does or doesn't do, the lives of many Syrians will likely be affected for a long time to come. More than 110,000 people have lost their lives since March 2011, and millions have been internally displaced or fled to overcrowded refugee camps.

For those who remain in the country, however, their lives have shifted from normalcy to survival. In a package released Sunday by Reuters, photos are able to express this change much better than words can.

Issa, a 10-year-old boy living in Aleppo, is shown working with his father to fix weapons systems in a factory for 10 hours a day. His education has been replaced with on-the-job training, and it seems that his childhood is being lost with each day.

Issa syria boy FSAissa syria boy FSAissa syria boy FSAissa syria boy FSAissa syria boy FSAissa syria boy FSAissa syria boy FSA

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09 Sep 18:27

The Ingenious Way A Pilot Figured Out Who To Shoot When Insurgents Attacked Wearing Army Uniforms

by Geoffrey Ingersoll

Cobra helicopter

A year ago, 15 heavily-armed insurgents wearing Army uniforms breached Camp Bastion in Afghanistan and leveled an assault on the airfield, causing destruction unlike anything seen since Tet in Vietnam.

U.S. Marines on Bastion — largely thought to be impenetrable — reacted immediately. The gunfight lasted hours, resulting in the deaths of all but one insurgent, the loss of two Marines, and injuries to many others.

In this month's GQ, Matthieu Aikins wrote what we think is the best, most thorough account of that gunfight.

In it, he details how a key decision helped pilots find and destroy the enemy:

The trouble was distinguishing friend from foe. The attackers were wearing U.S. Army uniforms, and they were mixed in with Marine positions. Lightfoot radioed for another one of his Cobra pilots, Major Robert Weingart, to swoop down and take a closer look.

With a Huey gunship flying on his tail, Weingart darted in and out of the columns of smoke, trying to decipher the pinpricks of light below in the green field of his night vision. Are those muzzle flashes, or rounds cooking off, or what? His wingman's voice crackled over the radio: "Hey, we've got reports of insurgents in the cryogenics facility on the east side of the road." Weingart flew above the barren ground between the fence line and the airfield to take a look. There was definitely someone shooting from that position, but he couldn't be sure, even with his night vision, who it was. He couldn't risk strafing friendlies. Then he had an idea: He radioed the base operations center and directed the ground troops to fire in unison on the enemy's position. He'd use the gunfire, glowing in his night vision, to point the way to the enemy. Within minutes the quick-reaction force unleashed a bright green string of tracers onto the cryo facility. Target confirmed. Weingart lined up the Cobra on an attack run and let loose a long burst of explosive twenty-millimeter cannon rounds.

Aikens' write up contains many other impressive details — like how Prince Harry was whisked away to a safe house moments after fighters breached the wire — so we encourage anyone who's interested to give it a read.

READ THE WHOLE POST HERE >

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09 Sep 18:18

Interested in a Feedly app on Windows Phone? Join the open beta for Phonly

by MobileNations

Phonly Feedly for Windows Phone 8

Windows Phone has been out for nearly three years, but there are still a handful of apps and services missing in the Store, at least in official form. Thankfully, we’ve got a strong community of devoted developers who take time to make a strong offering in the form of a third-party or alternative app. Phonly is an upcoming app on Windows Phone that will be a Feedly app on Windows Phone. There’s a beta opening up right now, but first let’s check the app out.

The post Interested in a Feedly app on Windows Phone? Join the open beta for Phonly appeared first on AIVAnet.

09 Sep 18:14

Of course NSA can crack crypto. Anyone can. The question is, how much?

by Peter Bright

Making and breaking encryption is one of the main roles of a signals intelligence agency. That NSA engages in such activities is not surprising. Aspects of this work aren't even secret: NSA involvement in the development of some cryptographic standards was legally mandated and openly acknowledged.

What we don't know, in general, are any specific details. Recent headlines, both here at Ars and elsewhere, paint a grim picture, suggesting that many or all of the cryptographic safeguards that people use to protect their privacy have been undermined. Simultaneous with this, cryptographic experts have said that the mathematics underpinning crypto is still basically sound. These attacks instead depend on implementation flaws, bad passwords, weak algorithms, corporate cooperation, and, perhaps, backdoors.

These mixed messages and ill-defined capabilities sound scary but perhaps scarier than they really are.

Read 14 remaining paragraphs | Comments


    






09 Sep 17:58

Officieren bekritiseren minister

Nederlandse officieren hebben steeds minder vertrouwen in het beleid van minister Hennis-Plasschaert. In Trouw schrijft generaal-majoor b. d. De Jonge dat er een onwerkbare situatie dreigt.
09 Sep 17:58

Why You Need A Sponsor — Not A Mentor — To Fast-Track Your Career

by Jenna Goudreau

Sponsor book jacket

If you thought finding and cultivating a mentor with clout would be your key to career success, you were dead wrong. 

Mentors may offer an open door and helpful guidance, but little more. To win, you need a sponsor, says Sylvia Ann Hewlett, CEO of think tank The Center for Talent Innovation (CTI) and author of just released “Forget a Mentor, Find a Sponsor: The New Way to Fast-Track Your Career.” 

“A mentor gives you friendly advice,” says Hewlett. “A sponsor is senior in your organization or world and has the power to get you that next job. It’s not about empathy.” 

CTI has tracked the “sponsor effect” since 2010 in four U.S.-based and global studies that clearly show that sponsorship — not mentorship — is how power is transferred in the workplace. When it comes to getting ahead you need more than the counsel of a supporter; you need someone to advocate for you when you’re not in the room. That takes someone who believes in you and has the juice to make it happen.  

Sponsors have three attributes, Hewlett says: They believe in your potential and are prepared to take a bet on you; they have a voice at the table and are willing to be your champion; and they provide you the cover you need to take the risks necessary to succeed. While mentors listen, sponsors act — by telling you what you need to know, clearing obstacles from your path, and making your success their business, she says. 

In the corporate world, a sponsor might be your boss or your boss’ boss. For an entrepreneur, sponsorship often comes in the form of a venture capitalist or an influencer who helps you make connections and raise money. 

Sponsorship is not a gift, says Hewlett. You can’t just walk up to someone and ask, “Will you be my sponsor?” Instead, it is earned. “They have to truly believe in your ability,” she says. “If I go to bat for a young talent, I have to be sure she’s going to come through. You’re very much aligning reputations.” 

So how do you impress a potential sponsor? Hewlett outlines the three most important tactics: 

Exceed expectations, and make your performance known. 

You’ve got to come through on an obvious front: stellar performance. Hit your numbers, meet deadlines, and go above and beyond, Hewlett says. “Nothing makes you easier to sponsor than outstanding results.”  

You’ve also got to make sure your sponsor knows about your success. Stay on top of your numbers, and keep your sponsor looped in. If they can easily point to your past successes, they’ll be better equipped to push for you to get a big assignment or promotion.  

Demonstrate that you are trustworthy and loyal.

“A leader wants you to make them look good,” says Hewlett. By advocating for you, sponsors are putting their own reputations on the line, so you have to be willing to help them succeed, too. According to her research, managers value a protégé who’s loyal more than they value someone who’s collaborative, visionary, or even highly productive. 

Demonstrate that you have your sponsor’s back by sharing valuable information, offering your assistance, giving honest feedback in private, and aligning yourself with them and their viewpoints in public. “Star performers are very likely to attract sponsors, and loyal performers are very likely to keep them,” Hewlett says. 

Bring something special to the table.

Identify and develop your best, most unique skill, and deploy it to make yourself indispensable, advises Hewlett. Ideally, this skill will not only set you apart from your peers but will also be something your sponsor lacks. Then it is additive to their own skillset, she says. The skill may be that you have such emotional intelligence that you can pull a team together in a way your sponsor can’t. It could also be as simple as having tech savvy or knowing a foreign language.  

Pat Fili-Krushel, the chairman of NBCUniversal News Group, told Hewlett that whenever she starts a new job and there’s a senior leader who she wants on her side, she figures out what they need to accomplish most urgently and then delivers it to them. Who wouldn’t be pleased? 

Despite that for decades mentorship has been the white knight of career success, it hasn’t proven effective, says Hewlett. Research by women’s advocacy group Catalyst found that women are mentored more than men, but men receive 15% more promotions. Meanwhile, research by CTI finds that one in four white men in the middle ranks of workplaces have sponsorship, but only one in eight women and just one in 20 minorities have them. 

One of the top reasons women and minorities struggle with securing sponsors is the level of comfort and trust, says Hewlett. Particularly, sexual tension or its reputation-damning outward appearance, which she calls “the 800-pound gorilla” in the room, can keep senior men from helping women, lest their attention seem inappropriate.  

“It’s a trip wire,” Hewlett says, “but it can be handled well.” Women can signal to senior men that they are not a threat and to the world that it is a strictly professional relationship with their attire and the way they present themselves, by openly discussing their rich personal lives, and meeting the sponsor in public view, such as having breakfast in the cafeteria or coffee in a common area.  

As the evidence for sponsorship’s effectiveness builds, companies are paying attention. Several corporations, including American Express, Cisco, and Deloitte, have launched programs that help senior leaders and high-potential employees find each other. CTI’s research shows these programs are seeing some initial success. 

Ultimately, hard work isn’t enough, says Hewlett. You need others to recognize your potential and help you up, and that means having powerful sponsors providing a boost. 

SEE ALSO: What Extremely Successful People Were Doing At Age 25

Follow me on TwitterFacebook and Google+. Find the latest business strategy news on @BI_Strategy and career insights on @BI_Careers.

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09 Sep 17:55

Windows 8.1 now available on MSDN and TechNet following developer complaints

by Tom Warren

Microsoft is reversing course today, allowing developers to download a final copy of Windows 8.1 ahead of its October 18th release. After originally announcing the finalization of the OS update last month, Microsoft was planning to hold back the final download for MSDN and TechNet subscribers until October 18th. The company now admits that was a mistake. "We heard from you that our decision to not initially release Windows 8.1 or Windows Server 2012 R2 RTM bits was a big challenge for our developer partners," says Microsoft. "We’ve listened and we get it."

Windows 8.1 Core and Pro editions will both be made available today on MSDN and TechNet, and the company is also launching a Release Candidate of Visual Studio 2013 for developers....

Continue reading…

09 Sep 17:02

How Vladimir Putin Became The Chuck Norris Of International Politics

by Adam Taylor

Vladimir Putin g20

Russian President Vladimir Putin earned a new distinction last month, when conservative U.S. blogger Matt Drudge branded him the "leader of the free world."

Drudge's support of Putin may seem odd (just last year he was angry with Obama for calling Putin after the Russian was re-elected president), but Drudge doesn't seem to be alone in his newfound high opinion of the Russian leader. When Business Insider posted a photograph of Obama's G20 "death glare" to Putin on Facebook, the comments were overwhelmingly pro-Putin.

"The back of Putin's head is more intimidating than Obama's 'death stare,'" one user wrote. Other less visceral, yet still positive, opinions about Putin can be found at places like Foreign Affairs journal and The New York Times' op-ed page.

The simple explanation for Putin's popularity is his opposition to military intervention in Syria, which puts him in the same camp as most Americans. But Putin himself appears to be gaining an international following, as people buy into his persona as a tough and clever underdog hero.

In respect to a recent meme, you might even call him the Chuck Norris of international politics.

We're not the first to notice the similar reputations. Norris has long been the Internet's standard bearer for masculinity with random facts about his strength and skill ("When Alexander Bell invented the telephone, he had three missed calls from Chuck Norris"), and that meme extended to Putin a few years ago ("Putin can solve any diplomatical crisis. With his fists"). Cracked.com calls him the "world's craziest badass," and multiple websites ponder who would win in a fight between Putin and Norris.

Putin's action-hero reputation comes from years of cultivation. Brookings researcher Hannah Thoburn points out that just a few months after taking office in 2000 he flew to the Chechen war zone in the back of a Sukhoi-27 advanced fighter jet. Before he even became president, Prime Minister Putin was saying that Russia would wipe out Chechen rebels even in the "outhouse."  The image of action-man Putin has been carefully nurtured too, through publicity stunts, like his famous, topless horse-riding, fishing, and hunting trip back in 2007 — it's popular with rural Russians in particular.

There may be some truth to his reputation. Before getting into politics, Putin had a long career doing unspecified work in the Soviet-era KGB. Today, he continues to practice judo to a high standard.

If Putin is an action hero, he seems to be the same type as Norris. Both are relatively small (Putin is 5'7" and Norris is 5'10") but fierce and clever. Norris' trademark style is playing "good guys to the bone, and despite having punishing martial arts skills, would always rather find a better solution than fighting" and having a "calm, reasonable" voice, according to the IMDB.

Putin cultivates the same image, especially when it comes to discouraging Western military intervention in countries like Libya and Syria. Additionally, his hard stance during Russia's war with Chechnya in the early 2000s garnered him newfound sympathy among some Americans after it was revealed that the perpetrators of the Boston marathon attack were ethnically Chechen. Putin didn't miss this — speaking shortly after the attacks, he effectively scolded U.S. politicians with an "I told you so." His hospitality for NSA leaker Edward Snowden, despite U.S. pressure, has also brought him attention and respect.

"I’d say the prime reason for this increase in positive coverage is that Russia watchers see how consistent, shrewd and effective Putin has been in handling such challenges, as Syria and Snowden, compared to his Western counterparts," Simon Saradzhyan, a research fellow at Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs at Harvard University and former editor at the Moscow Times says. "No matter how much pressure the U.S. has put him under, he has not budged and opinion polls show that substantial parts of the American public are closer to his and then Obama’s position on such issues, as Syria, opposing entanglement in a foreign country’s civil war."

Economist Clifford Gaddy, co-author of "Mr Putin: Operative in the Kremlin," says the past few weeks have actually revealed just how complex Putin really is. "He's probably the most formidable adversary America has seen in quite a while," Gaddy says. "He's clever and duplicitous, very skilled at playing people's own weaknesses and blunders against them — skills he honed as a KGB case officer."

The other interesting thing to remember is that if Putin's international support is gaining, it's largely among the most right-wing of bases. (Russia analyst Mark Adomanis points out that "traditional conservative outlets, WSJ editorial page, National Review, The Weekly Standard, still despise [Putin].")

Here too, there are some parallels with the worship of right-wing hero Chuck Norris — a man who not only donates money to Republican causes and visits U.S. troops, but also supports gun ownership and believes in biblical creationism. He's a vocal critic of Obama — last year he said that the re-election of the Democrat would bring "1,000 years of darkness."

Putin is very much a conservative — both socially (note his support for the Orthodox Church and lack of support for Russia's LGBT community) and fiscally (seeks a balanced budget, low taxes, etc). To some conservative Americans, that makes him more attractive than their own president.

"What [the American right] are saying about Putin is driven ... by their opposition to Obama," Gaddy says. "They hate Obama; they can't stand Obama's foreign policy/security team — Susan Rice, Samantha Powers, et al. As Putin has taken on the role as undisputed leader of opposing Obama's planned intervention in Syria, he suddenly becomes more sympathetic."

Putin's apparent support for restrictive laws on LGBT rights may well be another factor. "The Right sees Obama having hijacked American foreign policy to promote values which they, the Right, absolutely detest, such as LGBT rights," Gabby adds. "So to be very provocative, they bring up this image of Putin as a good guy."

Whatever the reasoning behind it, Putin's image as a "badass" leader is pretty unique in the world right now, and a marked contrast with the softer leadership styles of Obama, David Cameron, Francois Hollande, or Angela Merkel. Those leaders who might have earned a similar respect for their brash manners — such as George W. Bush, Nicolas Sarkozy, or even Hugo Chavez — are pretty much universally consigned to history books now. It gives Putin a space to fill.

"Everyone is looking for leadership right now," Fiona Hill of the Brookings Institute, co-author of "Mr Putin: Operative in the Kremlin," tells Business Insider. "[Putin] presides over it."

This is despite the fact that Putin has experienced the toughest period of his leadership in the past few years, in particular the large scale protests that took place after the disputed 2011 Duma elections. Many observers have felt that he was probably on his way out, but Hill notes that the Russian president has a way of "snatching victory from the jaws of defeat."

In this, too, there's a hint of an action hero. Given his long time at the top of Russian politics, Hill also offers another possible analogy for Putin; as the Bruce Willis of the "Die Hard" franchise, "an aging, balding hero returning to save the world again and again."

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09 Sep 17:01

There's A Breaking Bad Meth Lab Toy Set And LEGO Wants Nothing To Do With It

by Laura Stampler

breaking bad citizen brick meth lab LEGO

LEGO does not want to be associated with a lookalike brick toy set that recreates a meth lab from AMC's hit drama "Breaking Bad."

Citizen Brick already sold out of the $250 Superlab Playset — complete with more 500 drug-related parts! — that the company notes "is not sponsored, authorized or endorsed by the LEGO Group, owners of the registered LEGO(R) trademark."

The Drum reports, "Lego has refused to endorse the controversial use of its product owing to the inappropriate nature of its ‘adult content’." 

LEGO is currently focusing on toys with a scientific focus. It recently made headlines for creating a new female scientist figurine — avoiding gender bias inclinations of making her wear pink and donning other "girly" accessories. But she's breaking stereotypes rather than breaking bad.

This isn't the first time LEGO become unintentionally linked to the popular, but definitley not child friendly, TV show. A "LEGO Breaking Bad The Video Game Parody" gained more than 1.4 million views since late April.

While LEGO made a video game for "Lord of the Rings," "Batman," "Star Wars," and "Indianna Jones," the Danish company probably won't have Walter White star in a real game any time soon.

Here are images of Citizen Brick's now sold out meth lab play set:

breaking bad citizen brick meth lab LEGO

breaking bad citizen brick meth lab LEGO

breaking bad citizen brick meth lab LEGO

Here are the characters:

breaking bad citizen brick meth lab LEGO

SEE ALSO: Apple Is Nearly Doubling Its Design Team To Make Better Ads

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09 Sep 16:59

The mobile photography revolution – Talk Mobile

by MobileNations

The camera. If there’s any part of the smartphone that’s seen its usage rate skyrocket over the past few years, that’d be it. Smartphone cameras have gone from little VGA shooters barely worthy of being called a camera to 12, 20, and even 41 megapixel beasts with image quality unfathomable just a few short years ago.

We now walk almost everywhere with a small camera in our pockets or purses, logged in to Facebook and Instagram and Twitter, ready to share our latest heartwarming, heartbreaking, intense, intriguing, and inane moments with our family, our friends, and the world.

So are mobile phone cameras really good enough to replace a dedicated point-and-shoot camera? What about a bigger traditional DSLR? With these photos ever easier to share and reshare, how can we be sure that the photos we take that need to be private stay private?

The post The mobile photography revolution – Talk Mobile appeared first on AIVAnet.

09 Sep 16:27

PVV demonstreert bij ambassade

PVV-leider Wilders heeft vanmorgen bij de Roemeense ambassade gedemonstreerd tegen het openstellen van de grenzen voor werknemers uit Oost-Europa. Hij had een grensbord bij zich, met daarop de tekst Geen toegang, in het Nederlands en het Roemeens.

Nederland is verplicht per 1 januari volgend jaar de grenzen te openen voor werknemers uit Bulgarije en Roemenië. Burgers uit de landen krijgen dan dezelfde rechten als andere EU-burgers.

Volgens Wilders is een ruime meerderheid van de Nederlandse bevolking tegen de komst van Roemeense en Bulgaarse werknemers. Hij baseert zich daarbij op een onderzoek van Maurice de Hond.

Onderbuikgevoelens

Wilders ontkent in te spelen op onderbuikgevoelens. "Dat zakkenrollers meestal Roemenen zijn, zijn feiten, geen onderbuikgevoelens." Hij overhandigde op de ambassade een brief voor de Roemeense minister van Arbeid. "Ze waren het niet met ons eens, maar ze begrepen ons wel", zei hij na afloop.

Laagopgeleide burgers

Vandaag is in Den Haag een internationale conferentie over arbeidsmigratie. Die wordt georganiseerd door minister Asscher van Sociale Zaken. Die zei eerder dat hij zich zorgen maakt over de gevolgen van de eventuele komst van grote groepen arbeidsmigranten uit Oost-Europa. Dat gaat volgens hem ten koste van armere, laagopgeleide burgers in West-Europa.

Wilders zei van Asscher te verwachten dat hij vanavond, na afloop van de conferentie, bekendmaakt dat de grenzen toch gesloten blijven.

09 Sep 16:25

Nintendo hit by biggest drop in stock shares in over two years

by Emily Gera

Nintendo experienced a significant drop in stock shares after being excluded from the Nikkei 225 Stock Average, resulting in its biggest slump in more than two years, Bloomberg reports.

Shares of the company fell 8.4 percent to 10,860 yen in Tokyo. Nintendo previously gained 31 percent following expectations of its stock being added to the Nikkei, Japan's most widely quoted average of Japanese equities; however, it failed to be promoted in the annual index review as was expected by market analysts.

In a report referenced by Bloomberg, BNP Paribas SA analyst Takao Suzuki stated: "We believe Nintendo's shares have been overvalued due to speculative demand, on the assumption that they would be included in the Nikkei. As this expectation...

Continue reading…

09 Sep 16:19

Joe Belfiore now focused on phones, tablets, and PCs as Microsoft starts to combine software

by Tom Warren

Microsoft's massive reorganization is starting to take place, and some of the details on the structure of the new operating systems engineering group is starting to become more clear. All Things D reports that Windows and Windows Phone head Terry Myerson will have seven direct reports in the new structure. Marc Whitten, who has helped launch the Xbox One in his role as Xbox chief product officer, will oversee the Xbox team responsible for the software side. Henry Sanders, who previously worked on Windows Phone, will take control of OS development, while Chris Jones continues overseeing the Windows-related services.

Continue reading…

09 Sep 16:15

One In Three Global Consumers Say Social Media Has Influenced Their Purchases

by Cooper Smith

Roughly one in three online consumers in 23 countries said they have purchased a product or service based on a social media advertisement or posting, according to a new study by Ipsos OTX

The countries with the highest proportions of online consumers infuenced by social media were Brazil (69% based on an ad, 66% based on a post), followed by Indonesia (68%, 64%), and Mexico (61%, 60%). The proportions were also high for Turkey, India, and China. 

Only 18% of U.S. online consumers said they had made a purchase motivated by a social media ad, and 16% were influenced by a post.

The average across countries was 34% for an ad and 30% for a post. 

Looking at the demographic data, we find that the make-up of someone most likely to be influenced by social media to make a purchase is:

  • Female
  • High Income
  • High Level Of Education
  • Age 35 Or Younger

Ipsos OTX did not ask users to distinguish between free and paid social media so some of the consumers influenced by posts may in fact have seen paid post advertisements, known on Facebook as "sponsored stories," and not organic postings.  

We know that for Facebook, average revenue per user in emerging markets is just one-seventh of what it is in the U.S. and Canada.

The Ipsos data shows that majorities of emerging market consumers are super-receptive to Facebook ads and posts. That indicates there's room for emerging markets revenue growth as advertisers there begin to make more social media ad buys to target those consumers, and social media ad prices get a boost. 

Ipsos OTX's findings were based on a poll for 18,150 respondents. 

Download the chart and data in Excel.

BII social purchase driver

Here's a look at the demographic data: 

BII social commerce demographics 

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09 Sep 16:15

Why the iPhone, iPad, Apple TV, and AirPlay are killing dedicated gaming devices

by MobileNations

The intersection of people who love mobile and who love gaming is significant enough to have generated a ton of commentary surrounding the idea that traditional, dedicated gaming devices will be cannibalized by the likes of the iPhone, iPad, Apple TV, and AirPlay. Horace Dediu had a couple of interesting posts on the subject this weekend. In Third to a Billion, which included the above graphic, Dediu plots which platforms have reached a billion users and how long it took each to do so. From Asymco:

Android is the third platform to reach a billion users[1] . The first was Windows and the second was Facebook. Apple sold around 650 to 700 million iOS and is expected to be the fourth to a billion sometime next year.[2]

He notes Android is based on activations, but should correlate to users, that Windows took more than 10 years to reach the number, that both social (Facebook) and mobile (Android and iOS) have been much faster, and that iTunes accounts aren’t curving off, at least not yet. What this shows, relative to mobile’s impact on gaming, is the subject of a second post, Game Over. Asymco

That is where mobile is the clear winner. More people will hire mobile devices for their primary gaming activity. And as mobile devices get inexorably better, they will be hired for use in the setting where consoles have been king: the living room.

The implications are that Nintendo, Sony and Microsoft are beyond the point of no return in this industry. Gaming, as a business, cannot be sustained as a platform independent of a general purpose computer. Like other “applications” that used to have systems built around them conforming to their needs[3] the dedicated-purpose solutions came to be absorbed into the general-purpose platforms. And the modern general purpose computer is the smartphone.[4]

There he notes that dedicated word processors, calculators, video editing boxes, music players, etc. faced the same challenge, and were reduced to niche status or subsumed entirely. PCs, on the other hand, couldn’t do to gaming what mobile could because they were neither extremely portable for on the go, nor projectable for the living room. iPhone and AirPlay are.

As mobile devices get more powerful, and projection technology gets even better, the pressure on dedicated gaming devices increases. We’ve seen that story play out before. Sony a least produces mobile devices of their own, though their efforts to tie in real PSP-level gaming into their Android handsets have been kludgy at best. Microsoft, now buying Nokia, is positioned to do likewise but they’ve failed to even attempt to launch an Xbox portable and Windows Phone gaming has lagged a generation behind where it should be. Nintendo knows both console and portable, but has no experience in general purpose computing.

Apple and Google, meanwhile have shown no signs of “getting” gaming but managed to fall ass-backwards into their growing mobile gaming dominance. That shouldn’t give game platforms hope. That should scare the hell out of them.

Source: Asymco, Asymco

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09 Sep 16:09

Marine Posts Ridiculous Photo Of His Osprey Crash In Afghanistan

by Geoffrey Ingersoll

Osprey Crash

This brings new meaning to the Internet phrase "pics or it didn't happen."

Reddit user Keggerss posted an image of a Marine Osprey lodged in a precarious angle on  a wall in Afghanistan. There he is in front, smoke dangling, drinking Rip It, the energy drink ubiquitous to the combat-zone.

Sometimes things get so bad, you have no choice but to smile and laugh.

Here's the story Keggerss posted with the image, which we (having been deployed and flown on Ospreys) judge to be totally legit [edited for clarity and spelling]:

Just so everyone knows I was a passenger not the pilot.

Story Time.

Now everyone forgive me I'm typing this out on my mobile. This was roughly halfway through my deployment.

My unit had been doing helicopter raids and inserts for months before this happened. So everyone was somewhat used to getting rained on by hydraulic fluid which shoots from everywhere when these things fly.

Somehow you convince yourself that cant be a bad thing.

So we departed our FOB late night and the plane was operating as normal. We had a 45 minute flight. The crew chief looked back and gaveOK.

Now when these land their props rotate and make a loud pop.

This time though it was deafening you knew something was wrong, it felt like the Osprey was having a seizure. It's pitch black you can't tell how far you are from the ground then it hits.

My body was instantly in pain.

As you can see in the picture we landed on a ledge and it pinned the rear hatch of the bird closed. We had to exit out of the right door gunner's exit.

Everybody on the plane was instantly ordered to get into a defensive position. Mortars started coming in about 10 minutes afterwards. This is just a gold mine for the Taliban and a nightmare for us Marines.

There were still other Ospreys around when this happened so what did the pilots of this bird do? They jumped on another Osprey and rode back to the FOB.

Meanwhile we had to protect there plane. I always figured this was one of those things like a captain goes down with his ship. A convoy from a FOB came out and dismantled this plane and loaded it up on trucks and hauled it back roughly a week later.

P. S. RIP IT SHOULD OBVIOUSLY ENDORSE ME

Keggerss said in later comments that tank and harrier units came out to help the grunts protect the downed Osprey.

In the end, it's one of those war stories that could have gone much, much worse.

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09 Sep 16:05

Apple Is Nearly Doubling Its Design Team To Make Better Ads

by Aaron Taube


apple ipad mini commercialApple will nearly double the size of its in-house marketing design team, according to a report from Ann-Christine Diaz at Ad Age.

The company is adding between 200 and 300 new creatives to a team currently housing about 300 staffers in a move that Diaz reports will give Apple more control of its intellectual property and creative work.

The decision to add to its in-house team comes at an interesting time for the Apple brand, perceived by some as being less innovative than it was prior to Steve Jobs' death in 2011.

In July, statistics showed that Apple's big "Designed by Apple in California" campaign was a flop with viewing audiences. Those ads, produced by TBWA/Media Arts Lab, redirected the focus of Apple commercials from the specific features of the company's products to one that highlighted the ways the products improved people's lives.

By adding more creatives to its team, Apple can extend what the ads called its "signature," the intense care it gives to designing products, to the design of its branded efforts.

Ad Age reports that Apple will continue to work with outside agencies like TBWA/Media Arts Lab, Mono, and Eleven, but bringing more creative brainpower in-house will allow more external media offerings to be "Designed by Apple in California."

If nothing else, a more robust in-house design team could prevent Apple from repeating its recent practice of tossing almost-ready TV ads made by outside agencies after deciding the ads were not good enough to air.

SEE ALSO: This is the Amazon ad that scared the crap out of Apple's top executives

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09 Sep 16:05

Can games be designed by public committee?

by Colin Campbell

How much this is an exercise in public relations, and how much it actually converts into palpable action is, well, opaque.

But one game developer is absolutely determined to open the kimono and bare all to its customers. Launching a Kickstarter today, is a game called Neo's Land, a high fantasy MMORPG from NeoJac Entertainment, set to launch in 2014.

Although the company has spent two years developing a game engine, the game itself is being directed by consumers.

Here's how it works. NeoJac hosts a series of Google Hangouts with open invitations. Ten or so people (first come, first served) sit in on the round-table and talk about a specific issue, be that housing or classes or monetization models. Apart from providing the session...

Continue reading…

08 Sep 18:29

REVIEW: Nokia's Lumia 925 Is The Best Windows Phone You Can Buy (MSFT)

by Steve Kovach

nokia lumia 925

Nokia has several variations of its Lumia Windows Phones, but there are four that stand out as the company's top tier devices — the Lumia 920, 928, 1020, and 925.

It's the latter model, the Lumia 925, that's by far the most impressive. And it's the best Windows Phone you can buy.

The Lumia 925 has been around for a few months, but it's now available on AT&T for $100. You can also buy it through T-Mobile for $30 down and $20 per month for 24 months. But don't let the cheap price fool you. The Lumia 925 is still a premium Windows Phone.

Let's be clear though. Under the hood, the Lumia 925 is essentially the same phone as the Lumia 920 that launched nearly a year ago. The camera is a bit better and there are other minor hardware improvements, but if you compare the specs you'll see that the Lumia 925 is still last year's device wrapped in a prettier package. 

That's not a bad thing. My chief complaint with the Lumia 920 was that it was far too thick and heavy compared to other top-tier smartphones. The 925 is slimmer, lighter, and much more attractive. It has an aluminum frame that holds in a durable polycarbonate plastic backing. The front is all glass and has a vibrant 4.5-inch screen.

The aluminum feels really nice and smooth, and it's refreshing to finally see a Windows Phone built with at least some metal. (Most are really plasticky.) However, just like the metal on the iPhone 5 and HTC One, it can scratch very easily. I've only had the Lumia 925 for about two weeks and it's already attracted a few dings and scratches. (Don't get me started on what my poor iPhone 5 looks like after all these months.)

Like it does with other Lumia phones, Nokia makes a big deal out of the 925's camera. There's a dedicated camera shutter button on the side that you can use to launch the camera app, which makes it easy to quickly snap a photo without digging through your list of apps. Photo quality is really good, better than most phones I've tested.

But don't let a fancy camera be the deciding factor. As pretty as this phone is, it's still a Windows Phone, and Microsoft's Windows Phone 8 software still has a few annoying quirks. 

The biggest problem with Windows Phones is still its lack of high quality apps. Developers prefer to make their apps for iPhone and Android because Windows Phones only hold a tiny percentage of the smartphone market. It's not worth it for many developers to dump time and money into making an app for a relatively tiny audience. 

That means the Lumia 925 is missing a lot of popular apps that iPhone and Android users love: Vine, Instagram, Gmail, Google Maps, and so on. Even the Facebook app isn't made by Facebook. It's made by Microsoft with Facebook's permission. That means you're not always getting the latest mobile features. 

Yes, there are a ton of alternative apps to these popular services. But if you want the best apps, a Windows Phone like the Lumia 925 isn't a good choice.

Overall, Windows Phone 8 is a nice smartphone operating system. If you don't really care about apps, then it's a great option, especially because most Windows Phones like the Lumia 925 cost about half as much as other phones like the iPhone 5 or Samsung Galaxy S4.

If you want a Windows Phone and are an AT&T or T-Mobile customer, you should look at the Lumia 925 first. It's not the best smartphone, but it's a decent option if you're looking for premium device at a cheap price.

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08 Sep 18:28

China economy benefits from stronger U.S. demand

China’s economy shows fresh signs of resilience in August, with key trade data pointing to a sustained strengthening in global demand for goods from the country.
08 Sep 16:50

''Personeel dupe van prijzenoorlog''

CNV Dienstenbond vreest dat het supermarktpersoneel de dupe wordt van de nieuwe prijzenoorlog die morgen begint. Albert Heijn kondigde gisteren aan duizend artikelen van A-merken in prijs te verlagen.

De moordende concurrentie tussen supermarkten leidt nu al tot veel goedkope en flexibele arbeid, aldus CNV. ''Een nieuwe supermarktoorlog zal nog meer druk leggen op de medewerkers.''

Volgens cao-onderhandelaar Fedde Monsma van CNV is de supermarktoorlog van 2003, die Albert Heijn eveneens startte, vooral terechtgekomen op de schouders van het winkelpersoneel.

Boterham

Zo worden jonge werknemers op hun 19e vaak vervangen door goedkopere 16-jarigen. "Het wordt zeker voor oudere medewerkers steeds moeilijker om een volwaardige boterham te verdienen in de supermarkt", zei Monsma.

Ook willen werkgevers volgens Monsma voor een dubbeltje op de eerste rang zitten bij de huidige cao-onderhandelingen. "Werkgevers willen bijvoorbeeld zoveel mogelijk banen opknippen in kleine contracten van minder dan 12 uur, zodat er geen sociale premies betaald hoeven te worden."

08 Sep 12:58

Aspyr to Drop Game Support for Snow Leopard as OS X Mavericks Launch Nears [Mac Blog]

by MacRumors

snowleopard.jpgMac gaming publisher Aspyr has announced on its blog that as of the launch of OS X Mavericks later this year it will begin phasing out support for running titles on Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard, which includes future patches for existing games as well as any upcoming titles that the company plans to publish for Macs.

The company has also stated that older titles that receive updates or patches may stop working on systems running Snow Leopard altogether.

This means all future releases of Aspyr games, as well as any patches and updates for existing Aspyr games, will no longer be supported on Mac OS X 10.6 (Snow Leopard); in some instances, older titles that receive updates or patches may cease to work on OS X 10.6. To continue to play the latest Mac games, we recommend upgrading your computer or operating system to the latest version of OS X.

Aspyr also stated in the post that 8% of its existing audience is on Mac OS X 10.6, down from 16% in January. Recently, the company has published games such as Bioshock Infinite and Borderlands 2 on Apple’s platform. According to a report from yesterday, Apple is targeting a late October launch for OS X Mavericks.

    



The post Aspyr to Drop Game Support for Snow Leopard as OS X Mavericks Launch Nears [Mac Blog] appeared first on AIVAnet.

08 Sep 01:27

Upon Return From North Korea, Dennis Rodman Flips Out Over Questions About Jailed American Kenneth Bae

by Paul Szoldra

dennis rodman kim jong un watching basketball in north korea

After returning from another visit with Kim Jong-un in North Korea, former basketball star Dennis Rodman blew up at reporters asking him about Kenneth Bae, an American citizen imprisoned in the isolated nation since November.

From USA Today:

Previously, Rodman had urged Kim to release Bae, and had said he would ask Kim to do so on his second trip to the isolated nation this year. Sporting a silver, sequined, beret-style hat and shouting obscenities at journalists, Dennis Rodman remained his usual colorful self after arriving at Beijing's airport.

In a video taken at the Beijing airport by Mail Online, Rodman showed pictures of himself and the leader of the Hermit Kingdom: One picture of the pair was at what appears to be a golf course, and another showed them speaking over dinner. Soon after, as Rodman tries to leave, he's asked about Kenneth Bae.

"That's not my job to ask about Kenneth Bae. Ask Obama about that," Rodman shouted while trying to walk away. "Ask Obama ... ask Hillary Clinton, ask those a--holes."

Bae, a 45-year-old Christian missionary and tour operator, was sentenced to 15 years of hard labor for "hostile acts" while traveling in the country. Plans for diplomatic talks for his release broke down less than a week ago, according to The Guardian.

As he was leaving his Pyongyang hotel, Rodman told AP that Kim "really actually wants to change things," and encouraged him to "say some very good, positive, and very good things about this country, that's what we talked about a lot."

"He is my friend for life. I don't care what you guys think about him," Rodman said of the dictator. "I don't give a sh-- about what people around the world think about him."

Here's the video:

SEE ALSO: North Korea's Prison Camps Are Absolutely Horrifying

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