Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Channing Tatum Producing Burlesque Series for A&E

Making sure to bring home the bacon now that he's a father, Channing Tatum signed with A&E to produce a docu-series about a burlesque club.


The "Magic Mike" star's show will be set in New Orleans at his club, Saints and Sinners. However, there's no indication that the hunky actor will actually appear on the show.


Also on deck for Channing is the CBS comedy, "Nicky," in which he serves as an executive producer with partner Reid Carolin.


In the show, Nick Zano stars as a young man growing up in a multi-generational family run by women in New Jersey. Just as he's about to move out at 30, he decides to stay home and care for his younger sister.


Source: http://celebrity-gossip.net/channing-tatum/channing-tatum-producing-burlesque-series-ae-951228
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The Syrian Electronic Army Says It's Hacked Obama

The Syrian Electronic Army Says It's Hacked Obama

In just latest of many head-turning exploits, the Syrian Electronic Army now says it's broken into Barack Obama's Twitter account and website. Indeed, the hacker organization showed images of the website's backend and Obama campaign email accounts.

Read more...


    






Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/eg9GbvAljBs/the-syrian-electronic-army-says-its-hacked-obamas-twi-1453486504
Tags: Bitstrips   Grambling State University   demarco murray   Seamus Heaney   Amanda Rosenberg  

Donald Cerrone mulling featherweight move after UFC 167


Donald Cerrone may soon have a new home.


While fielding questions during a Monday live Google chat, the longtime lightweight contender indicated that he's considering a drop down to featherweight following his upcoming UFC 167 bout against Evan Dunham.


"I need to get (Mike) Dolce on my side. I'm going to 145 after this fight," a bearded Cerrone said.


"[Featherweight] is going to be a lifestyle change. No more Bud Light and Budweisers. No more stopping with Chris on the way here to eat random food. No more late nights with (UFC Senior Director of Public Relations) Dave Sholler at Wendy's. Those are all things you're going to have to change."


At six-feet tall, with a reach of 73 inches, Cerrone is already a large lightweight by any measure.


Nonetheless, after dropping three of his past six contests, including his most recent upset loss to Rafael dos Anjos, "Cowboy" suggested that the change of scenery, while perhaps not permanent, could do him some good.


"I just think I could really dominate down there," Cerrone said. "I don't know. Most people lose a lot of fights, and they run down. I'm going to go down to 45 after a win, so we'll see. I'll still be at 55 though, I'll play back and forth. Why not? Go get the belt."


Cerrone went on to explain that while no decision is yet final, he has already spoken to members of the UFC's public relations team and UFC matchmaker Sean Shelby about the potential change.


"They're like, as long as you can healthily make the weight. We don't want to see you in there dying," Cerrone said, before joking, "But Kenny Florian made it. I'll probably look worse than him, so it should be fun."


Source: http://www.mmafighting.com/2013/10/28/5040824/donald-cerrone-mulling-featherweight-move-after-ufc-167
Related Topics: Daylight Savings Time 2013   Helen Lasichanh   denver post   Blurred Lines Lyrics   evelyn lozada  

Monday, October 28, 2013

Introducing GizShorts: All Our Best Videos In One Place

Introducing GizShorts: All Our Best Videos In One Place

We've made a lot of videos over the years—sometimes absurd, sometimes insightful, sometimes just to embarrass and torment our staff. For the productions we work extra hard on, the ones that probe the depths of tech & design, we are introducing a new moniker.

Read more...


    






Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/a0vVesn5ww4/introducing-gizshorts-all-our-best-videos-in-one-place-1451710380
Tags: jay cutler   glee   marshawn lynch   lsu football   Linda Ronstadt  

NASA catches glimpse of the brief life of Southern Indian Ocean's first tropical cyclone

NASA catches glimpse of the brief life of Southern Indian Ocean's first tropical cyclone


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PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

28-Oct-2013



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Contact: Rob Gutro
robert.j.gutro@nasa.gov
NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center






The first tropical cyclone of the Southern Indian Ocean season lasted about one day. Tropical Cyclone 01S was born on Oct. 27 and by Oct. 28 had become a remnant low.


The first tropical cyclone of the Southern Indian Ocean cyclone season formed on Oct. 27 near 13.1 south and 63.4 east, about 570 nautical miles northeast of Port Louis, Mauritus. It was moving to the west-southwest at 7 knots. Maximum sustained winds were near 35 knots.


On Oct. 27, satellite imagery showed that the low-level circulation center is elongated indicating the system was battling wind shear. Satellite imagery revealed that the strongest convection was around the southern edge of the center. Maximum sustained winds were near 35 knots/40 mph/64.8 kph and the storm was moving west.


The Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer or MODIS instrument aboard NASA's Aqua satellite captured a visible image of Tropical Cyclone 01S in the South Indian Ocean. The image was taken on Oct. 27 at 09:30 UTC/4:30 a.m. EDT and showed an elongated storm.


On Oct. 28 at 0000 UTC/Oct. 27 at 8 p.m. EDT, Tropical Cyclone 01S was located near 13.1 south latitude and


62.5 east longitude, approximately 550 nautical miles north-northeast of La Reunion Island. Despite the maximum sustained winds near 35 knots/40 mph/64.8 kph, the storm was weakening and was expected to weaken because of wind shear.


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NASA catches glimpse of the brief life of Southern Indian Ocean's first tropical cyclone


[ Back to EurekAlert! ]

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

28-Oct-2013



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Contact: Rob Gutro
robert.j.gutro@nasa.gov
NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center






The first tropical cyclone of the Southern Indian Ocean season lasted about one day. Tropical Cyclone 01S was born on Oct. 27 and by Oct. 28 had become a remnant low.


The first tropical cyclone of the Southern Indian Ocean cyclone season formed on Oct. 27 near 13.1 south and 63.4 east, about 570 nautical miles northeast of Port Louis, Mauritus. It was moving to the west-southwest at 7 knots. Maximum sustained winds were near 35 knots.


On Oct. 27, satellite imagery showed that the low-level circulation center is elongated indicating the system was battling wind shear. Satellite imagery revealed that the strongest convection was around the southern edge of the center. Maximum sustained winds were near 35 knots/40 mph/64.8 kph and the storm was moving west.


The Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer or MODIS instrument aboard NASA's Aqua satellite captured a visible image of Tropical Cyclone 01S in the South Indian Ocean. The image was taken on Oct. 27 at 09:30 UTC/4:30 a.m. EDT and showed an elongated storm.


On Oct. 28 at 0000 UTC/Oct. 27 at 8 p.m. EDT, Tropical Cyclone 01S was located near 13.1 south latitude and


62.5 east longitude, approximately 550 nautical miles north-northeast of La Reunion Island. Despite the maximum sustained winds near 35 knots/40 mph/64.8 kph, the storm was weakening and was expected to weaken because of wind shear.


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Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-10/nsfc-ncg102813.php
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Rihanna Featured on Eminem's "The Monster": Listen Here!

Hoping their chemistry returns for another hit, Eminem teamed up with Rihanna for his new song, "The Monster."


Previously, the duo found success with the 2010 tune, "Love the Way You Lie" off of Slim Shady's seventh album, Recovery.


The new track will be included on Em's upcoming album, The Marshall Mathers LP 2, which hit stores on November 5th.


In the chorus, Ri-Ri sings, "I'm friends with the monster that's under my bed/ Get along with the voices inside of my head/ You're trying to save me/ Stop holding your breath/ And you think I'm crazy/ Yeah, you think I'm crazy/ Well that's not fair." Check it out in the player below.





Source: http://celebrity-gossip.net/rihanna/rihanna-featured-eminems-monster-listen-here-951193
Category: Tony Gonzalez   reggie bush   2020 Olympics   Payday 2   dairy queen  

3D Printed Lens Hoods Let You Stand Out In a Sea of DSLRs

3D Printed Lens Hoods Let You Stand Out In a Sea of DSLRs

At one point and time, carrying a DSLR made you feel special. In a sea of point and shoot cameras you looked like a bonafide professional photographer—even if you never ventured past your DSLR's Auto shooting mode. But these days everyone's got a prosumer camera hanging around their necks, and the best way to feel special now is to pimp yours with custom accessories like these colorful 3D printed Kapsones lens hoods.

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Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/78OUujuvIBg/3d-printed-lens-hoods-let-you-stand-out-in-a-sea-of-dsl-1453531090
Tags: Blackfish   Hugh Douglas  

Buffett Family Puts Money Where Their Mouth Is: Food Security





Warren Buffett (left), Howard G. Buffett (center) and grandson Howard W. Buffett collaborated on a book about the challenges of feeding more than 2 billion more mouths by 2050.



Scott Eells/Bloomberg/Bloomberg via Getty Images


Warren Buffett (left), Howard G. Buffett (center) and grandson Howard W. Buffett collaborated on a book about the challenges of feeding more than 2 billion more mouths by 2050.


Scott Eells/Bloomberg/Bloomberg via Getty Images




Oh, what a job. You've got $3 billion to address society's most intractable problems. So what do you do?


If you're philanthropist Howard G. Buffett, son of famed investor Warren Buffett, you set a deadline: 40 years.


And you move at "fast-forward" speed (that's the way Warren describes his son's pace) to steer the most vulnerable people on Earth towards a future where food production is efficient, plentiful and affordable.


Warren Buffett, Howard G. Buffett, and grandson Howard W. Buffett sat down to talk with us earlier this week about their new book, 40 Chances: Finding Hope in a Hungry World. Howard G. Buffett wrote most of the book, but his son, Howard W. Buffett, contributed several chapters.


In the foreward, written by Warren Buffett, he describes his son Howard G. as the Indiana Jones of his field. And as we've reported, Howard G. — who is most at home when inside the cab of a big ol' tractor — has lots of ideas about how we can feed more than 2 billion more mouths by 2050.


Among his many conclusions: Africa needs better seeds; fighting the drug trade can influence food insecurity; and more fertilizer isn't always the solution to maximizing farmers' yields.


Following are excerpts from our conversation. They have been edited for brevity and clarity.


ALLISON AUBREY: Howard G., You are passionate about finding solutions and I'm wondering if you and your son have any differences in the solutions you see going forward ?


HOWARD G: I think we're pretty much on the same page. The whole concept behind Forty Chances is really a mindset: If everybody thought they had to put themselves out of business in 40 years, you had 40 chances to succeed in what your primary goals are, you would probably be more urgent and you would be forced to change quicker. You can't just stick with something that doesn't work. And we stuck with some things that don't work for a long time.


AUBREY: And what's an example of that?


HOWARD G.: Well, you still find a number of NGOs, non-governmental organizations, that continue to spend huge amounts of money on projects and we found out — and we did that, actually, for quite a while we spent plenty of money on it and we just learned that if you want to change big problems, you have to change them with scale.


And we also learned something that I really didn't want to engage in for quite a long time, which was advocacy in terms of policy change. We've learned that project by project, you can't change millions and millions of lives. And it's ineffective in terms of making a huge difference if you've got ... bad polices. [They] will defeat good ideas and good people. So there isn't any choice in our mind today that we have to engage in advocacy.


AUBREY: Can you give me an example of something you would advocate for in terms of policy change?


HOWARD G.: Yeah, we don't have the kind of farm labor we need to do two things: one is to pick all the food and collect all the food that we grow, there's a huge amount of waste. Second of all, that waste is a great opportunity for food banks. And then we have to have volunteer base incentives to support a volunteer base to move that food into the food bank system. There's millions and millions of pounds of food that could be used for that, and a lot of it is good food. It's nutritious food.


AUBREY: Warren, when you listen to these kinds of solutions, does this make sense to you?


WARREN: It does make sense. And one thing you always have to remember about philanthropy is that in business, the market system tells you fairly promptly whether you've got a good idea or not. If you've got a product and people don't like it, it doesn't move and you've got to do something else.


In philanthropy, you can keep doing things that don't work over and over again. ... So I love the fact that Howie, as well as my other two children, constantly test their ideas against whether they really are working and have a healthy suspicion of anything that's proposed.


It's somewhat different from business, because in philanthropy you're tackling the very tough problems that have resisted intellect and money in the past. In business you're looking for something easy to do, maybe just a new improved product that will sell a little bit better than the previous one. So in philanthropy, if you're doing important things, you have to expect mistakes.


DAN CHARLES: There are a number things that get a lot of criticism in U.S. farm policy: biofuel mandates; arrangements for food aid to the third world; and farm subsidies, which have migrated into the form of crop insurance — some people say gold-plated crop insurance. Are those big problems? Do you subscribe to those criticisms?


HOWARD G.: On biofuels, I would say that there's an effort that I would support that moves away from the actual subsidization of biofuels. Biofuels can stand on their own merits at this point. And I think they have places where they fit well and make sense, and places probably where they don't.


We've had a couple of crazy policies on food aid. One of them being that you have to have 50 percent shipped on U.S. vessels. That is so archaic. It should have been done away with a long time ago. It costs the taxpayers money and it costs people who need the food. And it's really simple to understand that. That is pure politics, not in the interest of the people who are hungry and not the taxpayers.


On farm subsidies, your term 'gold-plated crop insurance' is a great way to say it. Crop insurance is probably one of the best ways to protect the downside in a very difficult business, but last year — and I know this factually, not because I've benefited from it, but because I know neighbors who did — they benefited more from the revenue from crop insurance than if they had had a good average crop. That's a gold-plated policy and it's not the right policy. Crop insurance should be a policy that keeps people from going broke, to make sure they can farm next year, but not to make them rich.


AUBREY: Howard W., issues of sustainability and stewardship of the land seem to be increasingly important to your generation. [Howard W. is 30.] From your perspective, what types of policies are needed to support issues of sustainability and protecting natural resources?


HOWARD W.: One of the most important policies, from my perspective and my own personal experience, has been the conservation stewardship program that the USDA has in place (CSP, for short). [This program] rewards farmers who have taken on new conservation-based approaches for water quality, for the water table, for their soil or for their air quality.


What's promising for me is that the federal government is now recognizing an actual monetary value of those improvement practices.


[In the book,] we have a specific chapter on a farmer in Northwest Iowa named Clay Mitchell. Clay has done an unbelievable job of improving the productivity of his farmland by 20 to 30 percent over all of his neighbors, and he's done it in a way that continues to build the organic material in the soil and continues to improve the environment all around him. And he really is a superstar when it comes to farmers. We need more leaders in the farming sector who continue to look at the value of their soil over time and what they can do to improve it, because it also has the return of increasing their revenue.


AUBREY: I'm curious about micronutrients. I'm wondering what your thoughts are on how to get food into people that's more nutrient dense.


HOWARD G.: I think the science will develop. It is developing. The challenge we have is a lot of the discussion immediately goes to GMOs, and it gets very confused about what GMOs are and what they aren't and how you provide solutions. ... But it's going to have to be done in a way that the knowledge is clearly based on evidence and science and, you know, there's this huge fear factor when it comes to GMOs.


Aubrey: What do you think feeds the fear?


HOWARD G.: I think the biggest legitimate concern is what will we have in 20 or 30 years as a consequence of GMOs that we don't understand today? There isn't anything today scientifically that I've seen that indicates that that should be a great fear. But I think also, it's not 100 percent clear, and that's where we have to rely on government regulation and government agencies to do the best job they can. To make sure how things are implemented allow us to adjust to that and adjust to what we learn in the future. It's pretty complex, and you have some very polarized opinions on it and different agendas on it and that makes it tough, particularly in the area of politics.


AUBREY: And Howard W., how do you see this issue of GMOs playing out?


HOWARD W.: I'm not going to make a prediction on it. I don't feel it's my place. I use GMO crops on my farm in Nebraska and it's allowed us to remain productive and profitable in what we're doing. ... It's the issue where everybody wants to make a sound bite out of it and draw a quick conclusion and that's what does the damage. If we can really have an evidence-based discussion that is driven by science, then that is going to get us to the point where we can use this technology to save a lot of lives and improve a lot of people's lives, and that should be what people care about. What's very irritating is the people that typically are throwing stones, either don't give other solutions or they are certainly not the ones who are hungry. This has got to be about solutions and not simply about attacking things. Solutions are feeding more people, having less people hungry. Solutions can't be, "Let's just stick with the status quo." The solutions are: How do we use technology in an informed way that is safe and help people?


CHARLES: There's one chapter, I believe Howard W. wrote, about NGOs and fundraising and how NGOs get in each other's way. Are NGOs really destructively getting in each other's way, and is there a better alternative?


Howard W. Buffett visited Thailand in early 2006 and investigated the work of NGOs that had responded to the Indian Ocean tsunami. He saw a "dramatic disconnect" between what local people wanted, and what NGOs from outside the region had imposed. One consequence, he concluded, was tremendous waste of aid resources.


HOWARD W.: First and foremost, a lot has to change from the donor community. Those organizations and foundations, even the government, have to do a much better job of prioritizing the leadership that local communities can take in finding the best solution for themselves and creating sustainable, eventually income-generating [activities] for their people. It can be tough sometimes to channel that energy, but we have to constantly be questioning ourselves and always trying to do a better job, no matter what it is we're doing.


HOWARD G.: I've got to add — I was in Chennai, India, after the tsunami and traveled to two other coastal areas down south. They were rejecting aid for the most part, and I will tell you, they did a pretty amazing job, on their own, getting things organized. And it was interesting to see a country that controlled aid quite tightly and did an unbelievable job of responding.


AUBREY: I know there are lots of stories of social change, but how would you summarize the message of your book Forty Chances?


HOWARD G.: The message is: You've got about 40 years in your lifetime to achieve the best things, the biggest things you want to achieve and look at it like, in 40 years you're going to be out of business. So that means you've got to invest in the best people, you've got to understand that everything is local and everything is personal. But yet you've got to do it at scale, and it means you've got to take risks and you've got to be willing to fail.


HOWARD W.: From my own personal lens, I would say the biggest take away for me is that a single individual, when given the opportunity, can change the world. We have to keep that in mind and not lose hope in the face of so many challenges that we're looking at all over the globe. For me personally, I have seen that through what my grandfather has accomplished in his career, and I've seen that through what my dad has already been able to do now through the foundation. And if people keep that mindset as well, it will provide them the energy and the determination to endure through whatever challenge they are trying to overcome.


AUBREY: Warren, does this make you optimistic?


Warren: I am optimistic. I feel terrifically about what all my three of my children are doing in philanthropy. We've been fortunate to make a whole lot more money than anybody can spend intelligently on themselves, so the object is to spend it intelligently on the rest of the world.


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thesalt/2013/10/24/240557784/buffett-family-puts-money-where-their-mouth-is-food-security?ft=1&f=1032
Category: Bad Grandpa   Tom Foley   Brian Hoyer   trent richardson   Liam Payne  

Microsoft's Surface numbers don't add up



Last Thursday, Microsoft reported outstanding sales and earnings for the third calendar quarter ending Sept. 30: $18.53 billion in sales (up 16 percent from the same quarter last year) with $5.24 billion in profits and a pro forma $0.63 earnings per share, excluding one-time items.


Those are tremendous numbers, meant to reinforce the idea that Microsoft's transition to a "devices and services" model is spurring the company to new heights. That may well be the case, although I remain skeptical about devices and services outside the cloud.


The number that stuck in my craw? Q3 revenues for the newly minted Devices & Consumer Hardware division -- specifically the revenue for Surface RT and Surface Pro tablets. (Microsoft wants us to call "Surface RT" just "Surface," but I'll minimize the confusion and continue to call the Surface RT just that. After all, last quarter, it wasthe Surface RT.)


Microsoft's press release for its third calendar quarter (officially known as FY14 Q1) contains this startling statement: "Surface revenue grew to $400 million with sequential growth in revenue and units sold over the prior quarter."


That's quite remarkable, considering that in the prior quarter Microsoft took a $900 million write-down for "inventory adjustments" on the Surface RT.


During the earnings call following the announcement, Microsoft CFO Amy Hood said that Surface unit sales had more than doubled between Q2 and Q3 2013. TechCrunch says it has confirmed that assertion with Microsoft.


Of course, we haven't been told how many Surface units were actually "sold" (versus shipped) and how much revenue they generated in any of the preceding quarters. Further confounding matters, Microsoft changed its accounting buckets between the second and third calendar quarters of this year, ostensibly to provide more accurate information on the devices and services drive -- I call it Microsoft Accounting 3.0. Effective with the third calendar quarter, Surface income and expenses are lumped into "Devices & Consumer Hardware," along with the Xbox, video games, Xbox Live subscriptions, and the old-fashioned Microsoft PC accessories, including keyboards and mice. That's more than a mixed bag, that's an undifferentiated pit.


The Accounting 3.0 change came on top of the "Windows deferred income" smoke 'n' mirrors that took place primarily between the last calendar quarter of 2012 and the first quarter of this year. A more cynical person than I might come to the conclusion that Microsoft's trying harder than ever to bury the bodies that matter to Windows folks. They're very, very good at it.


Microsoft's 10-Q filing includes further obfusc ... er, illumination:


  • "[Devices & Consumer] cost of revenue increased $946 million or 23 percent (year-over-year), primarily due to Surface product costs, as well as higher data center and headcount-related expenses." In other words, after taking a $900 million "inventory adjustment" for Surface RT in the second calendar quarter, Microsoft spent an extra $950 million or so in the third quarter (extra, that is, compared to Q3 2012 when Surface RT production was in full swing), primarily for making more Surfaces. I'm sure there's some hidden logic that escapes me.

  • "[Devices & Consumer] sales and marketing expenses increased $359 million or 12 percent, due mainly to increased advertising of Windows Phone 8 and Surface and higher headcount-related expenses, as well as due to higher fees paid to third-party enterprise software advisors." Nobody knows how much Microsft has spent on Surface advertising, but the ads started in 3Q of last year. At the end of calendar 2Q this year, Microsoft disclosed that it had suffered "an $898 million increase in advertising costs associated primarily with Windows 8 and Surface" for the preceding year. So in the past five quarters, Microsoft's spent an extra $1.3 billion on advertising Win8, Windows Phone 8, and Surface.

  • "D&C Hardware revenue increased $401 million or 37 percent, due primarily to Surface revenue of $400 million. The general availability of Surface RT and Surface Pro started October 26, 2012 and February 9, 2013, respectively." That's a very definitive statement, but it's subject to some, uh, interpretation, as you will see.

  • "D&C Hardware gross margin decreased $242 million or 54 percent, due to a $643 million or 101 percent increase in cost of revenue, offset in part by higher revenue. D&C Hardware cost of revenue increased, primarily due to $645 million higher Surface cost of revenue. Surface product costs increased with higher volumes sold, while other costs grew as we ready inventory lines for the Surface 2 launch and the holiday sales cycle." Keep in mind that Microsoft wrote off $900 million in Surface inventory in the preceding quarter -- and it hadn't started selling the new Surface 2 until after the third quarter.

  • "Cost of revenue increased [compared to Q3 2012], primarily due to a $645 million increase in Surface product costs."

  • "Sales and marketing expenses increased, the largest driver of which was a $111 million or 37 percent increase in advertising, largely for Windows Phone 8 and Surface."

Source: http://www.infoworld.com/t/technology-business/microsofts-surface-numbers-dont-add-229613?source=rss_infoworld_blogs
Tags: Jim Leyland   Kwame Kilpatrick   miguel cotto   krispy kreme   hell on wheels  

Tunisia expects $750 mln in World Bank, IMF loans soon, plans sukuk issue


TUNIS (Reuters) - Tunisia expects $750 million in loans from the World Bank and International Monetary Fund by the end of 2013 to prop up its fragile public finances and plans an Islamic bond issue early next year, it said on Monday.


Finance Minister Elyess Fakhfakh told reporters that the economy grew by 3 percent in the first nine months of this year from a year earlier and the government now expected a budget deficit of 6.8 percent of GDP for 2013, smaller than its previous forecast of 7.4 percent.


Nearly three years after its "Arab Spring" uprising, Tunisia's ruling Islamists and opposition on Friday began talks to end months of political deadlock that has weakened the country's economic outlook.


The government led by ruling moderate Islamist party, Ennahda, has agreed to step down in three weeks and make way for a caretaker government which will govern until elections next year that aim to put the country's transition to full democracy on track.


Tunisia saw the first of the Middle East revolts of 2011 when it overthrew long-time autocratic leader Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali.


Fakhfakh said the IMF would disperse $500 million next month from a previously agreed $1.7 billion loan, and the World Bank would pay $250 million by the end of the year. The government had previously said it would get $500 million from the World Bank this year.


Fakhfakh said the European Union had also agreed to a 300 million euro credit for next year.


But the minister said the African Development Bank or AFDB had cancelled a loan for 500 million dinars or around $300 million because of instability in Tunisia.


To cover part of its financing needs, Tunisia planned to issue a sukuk or Islamic bond for 1 billion dinars or around $600 million in February or March next year, Fakhfakh said.


Tunisia's economy grew 3.6 percent in 2012 and the government had forecast 3 percent growth this year.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/tunisia-expects-750-mln-world-bank-imf-loans-120550430--business.html
Tags: Ed Lauter   betrayal   Under the Dome   NSYNC VMA 2013   Maria Mitchell  

NVIDIA updates Shield with Android 4.3, button mapping, console mode

NVIDIA Shield console mode

The $300 NVIDIA Shield gaming console gains a great deal more functionality

NVIDIA today is letting lose a major update to its Shield gaming console, one that adds a significant amount of functionality to the $300 device. Here's the lowdown:

  • Android 4.3: Shield is getting updated to Android 4.3, making it one of the first Android devices — gaming phone, tablet or otherwise — to be updated to the most current (and available) version of Android. (And some apps can now be moved to the SD card.)
  • Console mode: This has been teased publicly, and now it'll be available. You'll be able to plug your Shield into your TV and control it wirelessly using a Bluetooth gaming controller.
  • Custom control mapping: Not every app has been optimized for Shield, and not every developer will take the time to do so. So NVIDIA's giving you a way to set your own custom mappings, download mappings others have made — and share your own with your friends.
  • GameStream exits beta: The deal where your computer crunches the graphics and shoots them to your Shield — provided you have the proper NVIDIA graphics card — grows up and gets official. (Plus you can get some nice deals on games when you buy a new graphics card.)

We've been giving the update the what-for over the weekend — a few initial thoughts, after the break.

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/q2Je8tBz5MY/story01.htm
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