Monday, December 31, 2012

Fiscal cliff: 48 hours to go and Senate negotiations slow to a crawl

A late-breaking Republican demand to cut Social Security benefits through an alternative method of calculating inflation adjustments has put negotiations at an impasse.

By Gail Russell Chaddock,?Staff writer / December 30, 2012

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) speaks with the media as he leaves the Senate Chamber Sunday afternoon. Efforts to prevent the economy from tumbling over a "fiscal cliff" stalled as Democrats and Republicans remained at loggerheads over a deal that would prevent taxes for all Americans from rising on New Year's Day.

Mary Calvert/REUTERS

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UPDATE: Senate majority leader Harry Reid told the Senate at 5:48 p.m. Sunday that Senate Republicans have dropped their call for Social Security benefit cuts, or ?chain? CPI, as part of a deal to avert the fiscal cliff. There is still ?significant distance? between the two sides, he said, but ?there is still time left to reach an agreement." The Senate will come in at 11 a.m. Monday, when the majority leader expects to make "further announcements."

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Fiscal cliff negotiations hit a wall late Saturday night, but it took Senate Republicans about 15 hours to figure that out.

Typically, 11th hour negotiations are marked by a flurry of offers and counteroffers, all-night staff negotiations, phone calls, and huddles in back rooms littered with pizza boxes and diet soda cans.

That?s not happening, say staff close to the negotiations. Senate Republicans made their last offer about 7:10 p.m. Saturday. Democratic staff for majority leader Harry Reid promised a response by 10 a.m. on Sunday. Nothing came.

Instead, word leaked to the press that a late-breaking GOP demand to cut Social Security benefits through an alternative method of calculating inflation adjustments as ?chained? CPI [Consumer Price Index] had put negotiations at an impasse. It was a poison pill, a show-stopper, Democratic aides told reporters.

2012 enters the record books. Were you paying attention? A news quiz.

President Obama first proposed the idea in negotiations last spring with House Speaker John Boehner (R) of Ohio for a comprehensive deal on the debt ceiling and deficit reduction. But it?s anathema to many Senate liberals.

?Social Security has nothing to do with deficit reduction,? said Sen. Bernard Sanders (I) of Vermont, after the talks stalled on Sunday. ?The idea of Republicans asking for cuts for Social Security and cuts for programs for disabled veterans while at the same time protecting the wealthiest people in this country is totally outrageous and I?m glad that Senator Reid said no.?

But GOP staff close to the negotiations say that Reid or his staff never conveyed that view back to Republicans.

?If they have a problem with that piece, we are encouraging them to resubmit an offer with it,? says a GOP aide, who spoke on condition of anonymity. ?But all we heard is that the majority leader would not be countering.?

?There is no single issue that remains an impossible sticking point,? said Senate minority leader Mitch McConnell in a floor speech before party caucus meetings to brief senators at 3 p.m. ?The sticking point appears to be a willingness, an interest or frankly the courage to close the deal.?

Standing side by side on the Senate floor, Senator Reid responded: ?I have had a number of conversations with the president, and at this stage we?re not able to make a counteroffer.?

?Perhaps as the day wears on, I will be able to,? he added. ?I will say this: I think that the Republican leader has shown absolutely good faith. It?s just that we are apart on some pretty big issues.?

If Senate leaders fail to reach an agreement, the Senate is expected to take up on Monday President Obama?s proposal for a stripped down agreement that would extend Bush-era tax rates for all incomes below $250,000 and extend unemployment rates at the current 99 weeks.

But such a measure would also have to pass the House, where many GOP conservatives are strongly committed to opposing all tax hikes. Last week, Speaker Boehner was forced to pull his own ?Plan B? proposal to extend current tax rates for all incomes below $1 million, after opposition within GOP ranks.?

?I still can?t believe they won?t get something done given the perilous place this leaves our country,? said Sen. Olympia Snowe (R) of Maine, after the floor exchange between the two leaders.

?But the only thing Congress is predictable about is waiting until the very last hour,? she added.

2012 enters the record books. Were you paying attention? A news quiz.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/buISQw8YIEU/Fiscal-cliff-48-hours-to-go-and-Senate-negotiations-slow-to-a-crawl

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Apple Security: Mac, iPhone Safer Than Ever?

 Apple Security: Mac, iPhone Safer Than Ever?

Whether considering specific threats or the big existential picture, there is no better time to own a Mac or iOS device. Sounds nice, but is Apple security good enough for users to let down their guard? Here?s a quick look at the good and the bad inside the walled garden.

First and foremost, it bears mentioning that any computer can be hacked ? it?s merely a question of time and opportunity.

That said, TidBITS? Rich Mogull offers a very upbeat assessment of Apple security as we head into the New Year:

Apple?s security is, across the board, stronger now than at any time in the nearly eight years I?ve been researching and writing about the company?s products and services. Which is important, since Apple also faces more security challenges than at any time in its past.

The existential threat to Mac security in recent years was Java, which has been a big problem for Windows and Linux, as well. However, the issue on the Mac began to diminish after Apple handed off Java update responsibility to Oracle and, just as importantly, deprecated Java by making it optional, not part of the default OS X installation.

Further, OS X automatically deactivates Java ? no interaction required ? if it goes unused for a period of time, which is just plain smart.

Those things happened months ago, but the payoff is just becoming apparent.

Increasing popularity, smaller target

The baseline fundamentals executed by Apple that make both the Mac and iOS platforms much more secure ? apps must be sandboxed and reviewed before listing on either the Mac App Store or iOS App Store ? have been somewhat unpopular with developers. However, although app sideloading is common on both platforms, the great majority of users are getting software from official, curated channels, which greatly reduces the security exposure of Apple products.

The impressive bit here is that Apple has improved Mac and iOS security even as they?ve increased market share.

For what it?s worth, Microsoft is beginning its own effort to secure Windows inside a walled garden. However, given the hodgepodge, inconsistent approach, it?s hard to imagine Redmond will be successful at least in the short term.

Contrariwise, Google?s Android platform is ?open,? which is just another way of saying it is woefully insecure.

So, is Apple security good enough? Perhaps.

However, the real question isn?t absolute security, but rather which platform does it best? Clearly, Apple is doing a much, much better job than either Microsoft or Google?

What?s your take?

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/tapscapeRSS/~3/ZbCuZD0C0Aw/

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New MOHAI opens at South Lake Union location

by SUSAN WYATT / KING 5 News

Bio

KING5.com

Posted on December 29, 2012 at 1:06 PM

Updated yesterday at 3:59 PM

The Museum of History is holding a grand opening celebration at its new location in the beautifully restored Naval Reserve Armory at Lake Union Park in downtown Seattle.

Seattle Mayor Mike McGinn invited a group of children to help cut the ribbon as the new MOHAI was declared officially open.

It took more than a decade and $90 million to move the museum from its site along SR 520 near the University of Washington to its new home.

"Moveing to South Lake Union is truly a transformational experience for MOHAI," said Leonard Garfield, MOHAI's Executive Director. "We are simply thrilled to welcome the community into our new space."

Among the pieces on display are the iconic red neon Rainier Beer "R," the 1919 Boeing B-1 floatplane that carried mail between Seattle and Victoria, and the big pink "Toe Truck."

More information on grand opening events

?

Source: http://www.king5.com/news/cities/seattle/New-MOHAI-opens-at-South-Lake-Union-location-185165941.html

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Is the iPad Set for a Holiday Blowout or Blowup?

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Weekend Highlights: Foss Patents reports that the ITC Judge wants Samsung to post a bond for 88 percent of its U.S. smartphone sales due to the Apple patent case; The Macalope considers small sample sizes; Insanely Great Mac updates a video review of results of charging iOS devices with the newest 12v charger, with interesting results; Rocco Pendola at TheStreet on the massive opportunity yet to be realized with Apple's million-dollar-per-day retail stores; MacNewsWorld's John Mello clarifies reports claiming Tim Cook's pay was cut 99%, when in actuality his base pay was raised by 51%; Macworld reviews the big Apple news stories of 2012; it seems that Apple's lack of online reviews are what brought down their online customer satisfaction score, which is still a respectable 80; $15 billion is what Samsung may be forced to pay for its attempt to ban Apple products in the EU; Apple had a huge Christmas according to Distimo, seeing an 87% increase in App Store downloads; report from Ina Fried over at AllThingsD says developers finding it more difficult to obtain app loyalty; Google's YouTube and Maps apps topped list of most downloaded apps on December 25th; former Apple designer reveals early product prototypes featuring some very interesting designs; LG seeking to ban Samsung's Galaxy Note for patent infringement; sending a quake of concern through ultrabook vendors, MacBook Air rumored to feature new processor platform in 2013 while retaining same design?reports in our Hardware/Software section; and apparently iDevice demand is so high that Apple's suppliers are going to keep working through the Chinese New Year; PC Magazine reviews Flickr for iPhone; PadGadget offers advice on finding accessories for your new iPad, iPad mini; Charles Moore discusses the pros/cons of buying Apple's extended AppleCare warranty for your devices; tablets now disposable commodity?

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Sat Dec 29
"Is the iPad Set for a Holiday Blowout or Blowup?" The Motley Fool 8:56 PM
  • "ITC judge wants Samsung to post a bond of 88% of its U.S. smartphone sales due to Apple patent case"?Foss Patents?7:24 AM
  • "ITC Judge recommends Samsung post 88 percent value bond, import bans in Apple patent case"?Engadget?8:33 AM
  • "ITC judge recommends ban on Samsung devices infringing on Apple patents: Following an October preliminary finding, judge also approves design tweaks for Samsung."?Ars Technica?9:27 PM
  • "Details of proposed sanctions emerge in Apple-Samsung case: Sanctions against Samsung in patent case before U.S. International Trade Commission would involve sales, import ban and posting of bond for 88 percent of value of smartphones at issue while potential bans were under review."?CNET News?4:41 PM
  • "Apple (AAPL) Drops Patent Claim Against Samsung's S III Mini in the U.S."?Wall Street Pit?7:19 AM
  • "Apple's wild ride, set to music"?Fortune?7:21 AM
  • "No Matter How You Look at It, Apple's Shares Are Cheap"?Barron's?7:21 AM
  • "The Idea That Apple's Best Days Are Behind It Is Absurd/"?Business Insider?12:12 PM
  • "'Not Deliberate' Says Google, On Google Finance Showing Apple Stock Chart For 'Sell'"?Search Engine Land?9:05 PM
  • "Reports of Tim Cook's Pay Cut Greatly Exaggerated: Despite appearances, Apple CEO Tim Cook's $1.3 million cash salary actually was a $400,000 increase over his pay in 2011. The company compensated him with $378 million last year, but the overwhelming majority of it was in restricted share units: a sort of stock grant that has no actual current value."?MacNewsWorld?12/28
  • "Apple gives Tim Cook 51 percent salary increase: Apple CEO Tim Cook received compensation totaling $4.17 million in 2012, down 98.9 percent on last year?although his 2011 compensation of $378 million consisted mostly of a one-off stock grant, worth $376.2 million at the time."?IDG News Service?12/28
  • "Huge Christmas for iTunes, App Store"?PC Magazine?12/28
  • "AAPL: iPad mini Sells Out in Hong Kong, Says Topeka"?Barron's?12/28
  • "Apple to drop patent claims against new Samsung phone: Apple Inc has agreed to withdraw patent claims against a new Samsung phone with a high-end display after Samsung said it was not offering to sell the product in the crucial U.S. market."?Reuters?12/28
  • "Apple Will Drop Galaxy S III Mini From Samsung Patent Suit"?Bloomberg?12/28
  • "Apple to drop patent claims against Samsung phone"?AFP?12/28
  • "Apple drops patent claim against Samsung Galaxy S3 Mini"?CNET News?12/28
  • "Samsung Could Face $15 Billion Fine For Trying To Ban iPhone, Other Apple Devices"?BGR?12/28
  • "Apple fined by China court for copyright violation"?BBC?12/28
  • "Apple loses another copyright lawsuit in China: Xinhua"?Reuters?12/28
  • "Apple's $160K Copyright Fine In China Is A Pittance, But Could It Open The Door For Further Claims?"?TechCrunch?12/28

Come See Our Marked Down Holiday Prices at Macsales.com Savings on Memory, Hard Drives, SSDs, & More. Free Shipping On All Orders Over $59 & On All Memory Orders Over $25! Macsales.com


AppleCare/Troubleshooting
  • "Q&A: MacFixIt Answers/This week, readers e-mailed in questions about RAM prices for MacBook systems, resetting admin passwords, and more."?CNET Reviews?12/28
Reviews/How-To/Tips
  • "Corel AfterShot Pro vs Adobe Lightroom 4: Noise Reduction"?Foliovision?12/28
  • "Audirvana Plus audiophile music player (review)"?IT.Enquirer?12/28
  • "Favorite Mac Gems of 2012"?Macworld?12/28
  • "How to quickly set calendar times in OS X: If needed, you can take advantage of the OS X Calendar's ability to identify time frames to enter events faster."?MacFixIt?12/28
  • "How to Create a Keyboard Shortcut for Menu Items Everywhere"?Mactuts+?12/28
  • "Get Emoji Definitions Quickly in iOS"?OS X Daily?12/28
  • "Let's Talk About One-Trick Pony Apps For Your Mac (the app that's always on top)"?NoodleMac?12/28
  • "How An App Makes Your Mac Faster And Makes Your Battery Last Longer"?BohemianBoomer?12/28
  • "A Simple, Inexpensive Way To Create Subtitles Or Captions On Your Movies"?McSolo?12/28
  • "Is There A Simple, Easy, Inexpensive Way To Hide Files And Folders On A Mac?"?Mac 360?12/28
  • "How This Clever, Free App Can Help You Become A Mac Power User"?TeraTalks?12/28
Op/Ed
  • "Stupidity That's Hereditary"?Rixstep?12/28
  • "Why Apple does cloud computing right."?PalmAddict?12/28
Press Releases
  • "GraphicConverter 8.5 Adds Retina, 16-bit Grayscale RAW Support, More"?FairerPlatform?12/28
  • "Bluestacks App Player brings 750,000 Android apps to OS X"?T3?12/28
  • "Zevrix Extends 50% Holiday Sale until January 5 for All Products"?prMac?12/28
  • "iPhone and iPad sales: Two Christmas Day data points/1) 17 million iOS and Android devices activated; 2) App Store downloads up 87%"?Fortune?12/28
  • "Apple's Christmas gift - an 87 percent rise in app downloads"?CNET News?12/28
  • "iPad continues to lead the tablet market in web traffic"?SlashGear?12/28
  • "Report: iPad Still Destroying Other Tablets in Web Usage"?Mashable?12/28
  • "Huge iOS and Android Activity on Christmas Day"?Forbes?12/28
  • "It's Getting More Costly for iPhone App Makers to Get Loyal Customers"?AllThingsD?12/28
  • "Apple sees big slide in customer satisfaction"?TG Daily?12/28
  • "Analyst: Apple may have to pay for 'iPhone' name in Brazil"?Electronista?12/28
  • "YouTube, Google Maps top list of most download apps on Christmas Day"?iDownload Blog?12/28
  • "Apple designer shows off early prototypes in new book"?Electronista?12/28
  • "Early Apple Computer And Tablet Designs Reveal The iMac And iPad That Might Have Been"?TechCrunch?12/28
  • "How Apple's holistic approach to design began back in 1982"?Ars Technica?12/28
  • "Upcoming book gives look at early Apple designs"?CNET News?12/28
  • "Apple Computer Designs That You've Never Seen [Video]?Mashable?12/28
  • "China's ZTE Targets iPhone"?WSJ.com [Paid Membership Required]?12/28
  • "Ihnatko: The best tech products of 2012"?Chicago Sun-Times [Free Registration Required]?12/28
  • "New York City Mayor Bloomberg blames iPhones & iPads for increase in crime"?9 to 5 Mac?12/28
  • "Mayor Bloomberg blames Apple thefts for rise in New York City crime rate"?The Verge?12/28
  • "NYC mayor blames theft of Apple devices for uptick in crime"?CNET News?12/28
Non-Apple News
  • "Microsoft Invents Smart Walls for Next-Gen Homes & Offices"?Patent Bolt?12/28
  • "Trend 2013: Desktop Computers with Tiltable Touch Displays"?Patent Bolt?12/28
  • "Google's new VP9 video technology reaches public view"?CNET News?12/28
  • "Here Comes the First Smartphone for Baby Boomers"?TheStreet?12/28
  • "LG Display bringing Retina Display-like resolution to 7-inch tablets, 12.9-inch laptop screen"?ZDNet?12/28
  • "Japanese mobile carriers beg users to limit New Year's texts, calls"?IDG News Service?12/28
  • "Ouya game consoles now on their way to developers"?CNET News?12/28
  • "OUYA Ships 1,200 Development Consoles, Shows Off Its Pre-Release Android Gaming Hardware On Video"?TechCrunch?12/28
  • "Mobile gift cards increase in popularity"?Financial Times [Paid Membership Required]?12/28
  • "Schools use smart devices to help make kids smarter"?USA Today?12/28
  • "All is well after Zuckerberg photo flap"?CNN?12/28
  • "Bug reveals 'deleted' Snapchat videos"?BBC?12/28
  • "Kim Dotcom To Host Mega's Launch Event At His New Mega Zealand Mansion Next Month"?TechCrunch?12/28
  • "DotCom promises splashy launch for Mega"?CNET News?12/28
  • "Report: Fujitsu President Says Windows 8 Demand Weak, Intros New Smartphone"?PC Magazine?12/28
  • "Weak Windows 8 Demand Saps PC Sales, Fujitsu President Says"?Bloomberg?12/28
  • "Cisco, HP, Walmart, others support Judge Posner, propose methodologies for patent damages"?Foss Patents?12/28
  • "Android-Android war raging in Korea as LG seeks injunction against Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1"?Foss Patents?12/28
Publications/Podcasts
  • "Hartmut Esslinger's Upcoming Book Reveals Early Apple Designs"?Design Trend?7:25 AM
  • "Gene Steinberg meets Peter Cohen, from The Loop and the Angry Mac Bastards radio show, and Kirk McElhearn, Macworld's 'iTunes Guy,' this week on The Tech Night Owl LIVE!"?The Tech Night Owl LIVE?12/28
  • "New iPads In March And Our iOS 7 Hopes And Dreams On Our All-New CultCast"?Cult of Mac?12/28
  • "Podcast: End of Year Review - 2012 Apple products plus Holiday wrap up"?Insanely Great Mac?12/28
  • "Apple to Update MacBook Pro and MacBook Air in June 2013 with New Processors, All Retina?"?MacRumors?12/28
  • "Here Come New, More Powerful Versions Of Apple's Best Computer, The MacBook Air"?Business Insider?12/28
  • "Suppliers hint at changes to MacBook Air -- Digitimes"?CNET News?12/28
  • "Rumor: New MacBook Pro and MacBook Air Due In June 2013"?Apple Bitch?12/28
  • "Apple Suppliers To Continue Work During Chinese New Year To Meet High Market Demand"?App Advice?12/28
  • "Strong demand prompts Apple suppliers to work during Chinese New Year"?AppleInsider?12/28
  • "'Insatiable demand' for iPad mini drives stock-outs in China"?AppleInsider?12/28
  • "iPad mini in hot demand in China -- analyst"?CNET News?12/28
AppleCare/Helps
  • "I have a little later (mid-year vintage) model of that machine and so far am having no issues. However, there are some things to try and sleuthing to do. I would first try two things: Try resetting the PRAM and the SMC. There are instructions for both procedures all over the place. Also, determine if this happens only when the 9400 is involved, or does it happen with the 9600 (or with both). Are there any console messages that occur just prior to the panic? What software is running at the time of the crash? Do you recall installing any particular software or attaching any special hardware just prior to this syndrome beginning?"?MacInTouch?12/28
Price Trackers/Deals
  • "Fruitopia For iPhone Is Temporarily Available For Free (Normally $0.99)"?Apple Sliced?9:33 AM
  • "World of Blocks For iPhone Is Free Right Now (Previously $0.99)"?Apple Sliced?9:33 AM
  • "ORBITAL HD For iPad Is Free Today (Was $2.99), The iPhone Version Is Also Free"?Apple Sliced?9:33 AM
  • "Apple drops prices on refurbished Mac Minis by $50, now start at $469"?9 to 5 Mac?4:00 PM
  • "Defender II For iPhone and iPad Is Temporarily Available For Free (Normally $0.99)"?Apple Sliced?12/28
  • "LensFlare For iPhone and iPad Is Free Right Now (Previously $0.99)"?Apple Sliced?12/28
  • "Puzz For iPad Is Free Today (Was $1.99)"?Apple Sliced?12/28
  • "15" MacBook Pro Prices & Sales"?MacPrices?12/28
  • "13" MacBook Pro Prices & Sales"?MacPrices?12/28
  • "MacBook Air Prices & Sales"?MacPrices?12/28
  • "PadGadget Daily App Deal ? 80 iPad Apps on Sale"?PadGadget?12/28
  • "2012 iPod touch Deals: New from $185, Refurbished from $129"?FairerPlatform?12/28

Deal Brothers Daily Deal: Attention Merchants: MasterCard and VISA may cost you more than AmEx


  • "Is the iPad Set for a Holiday Blowout or Blowup?"?The Motley Fool?8:56 PM
  • "Steve Jobs Isn't The Only Kind Of Artist Leader"?Forbes?8:52 PM
  • "Google's big push to make better iOS apps than Apple"?GigaOM?8:43 PM
  • "What Is an iPhone? My dumbphone experiment takes an unexpected twist."?Technology Review?8:42 PM
  • "Type 'sell' into Google Finance and take a bite out of Apple: It's not clear why, exactly, this is happening, but as of this writing, if you type 'sell' into Google Finance, you get Apple's rather sullen stock chart. Algorithmic slip-up? Or gremlinesque Android?"?CNET News?6:34 PM
  • "Top Comments: The Problems with Facebook, Windows and Apple"?Mashable?4:41 PM
  • "Apple And Google Race For Black Gold"?Forbes?12:02 PM
  • "ITC judge recommends ban on Samsung devices infringing on Apple patents: Following an October preliminary finding, judge also approves design tweaks for Samsung."?Ars Technica?9:27 PM
  • "Loss Of Apple'S Processor Business Unlikely To Affect Samsung"?BGR?12/28
  • "Attempts to ban Apple devices could see Samsung fined $15 billion"?TUAW?12/28
  • "The Sad Tale of Two Apple Audio Players"?512 Pixels?12/28
  • "Apple's iPad Generates 87% of Pre-Xmas Tablet Web Traffic"?The Mac Observer?12/28
  • "Man Bites Dog: China Fines Apple for Copyright Infringement"?TechNewsWorld?12/28
  • "China iPad mini Demand Called 'Insatiable"?Tapscape?12/28
  • "Sorry folks, book publishers don't know Apple's plans"?TUAW?12/28
  • "Rethinking The Mobile App 'Walkthrough'"?TechCrunch?12/28
  • "The Year of Doom For Microsoft, Google and Apple"?Forbes?12/28
  • "Why I Might Drop the iPhone 5 for the Galaxy Note II, and you should too." ["All in all, Apple has fallen behind the curve. After trying the Galaxy Note II for two weeks, it's clear that Android Jellybean (4.1) has managed to pull ahead. And the second iteration of the Note ? a device I've made fun of since before it even made it to the shelves ? is a far better phone, semantically and as a competitive computer."]?Forbes?12/28
  • "Tim Cook's $4.2M Compensation; Foxconn's Improving Conditions; EA Scrubs Gun Links"?PC Magazine?12/28
  • "Are tablets now disposable computing devices? Summary: With the price of 7" tablets now reaching the sub-$200 level, should they be considered disposable computing devices?"?ZDNet?12/28
  • "Can the N.Y. Times ride Apple all the way to a Pulitzer? Part 9 in its iEconomy series, published Thursday, is the hammer that tries to nail it"?Fortune?12/28
  • "Social networks, Apple, Microsoft and Linux in 2013"?The Inquirer?12/28
  • "Looking back at my Apple-related predictions for 2012"?AppleDailyReport?12/28
  • "Shut Up, You're Not Apple"?Forbes?12/28
  • "Is AppleCare extended warranty coverage worth the money?"?AppleTell?12/28
  • "[Wayne] The tech I used most in 2012"?BetaNews?12/28
  • "The Most Disturbing New Trend For Apple Customers In 2012"?PixoBebo?12/28
Non-Apple
  • "The Wii U Is The Nintendo'S Last Console"?BGR?12/28
  • "5 common computer problems you can fix yourself"?USA Today?12/28
  • "Raspberry Pi Hack Turns The Ultra-Affordable Computer Into An AirPlay Receiver"?TechCrunch?12/28
  • "ASUS Matrix Radeon HD 7970 Platinum Review"?HotHardware?12/28
  • "16 of the most useful cloud management tools"?Network World?12/28
  • "Digitimes Research: Loss of Apple processor orders unlikely to affect Samsung"?DigiTimes?12/28
  • "Zuckerberg Photo Flap: 4 Lessons/What Randi Zuckerberg's 'private' Facebook photo -- and subsequent Twitter fuming -- can teach the rest of us about social business."?InformationWeek?12/28
  • "Tips to help your smartphone work better" [Video Report]?CNET News?12/28
  • "Can New BlackBerries Help Save Research in Motion?" [Video Report]?TheStreet?12/28
  • "Google Music Scan and Match swaps explicit songs for clean tracks"?TG Daily?12/28
  • "2 Tech Moments of 2012 That Made You Say 'WTF?'"?Wired Magazine?12/28
  • "2012: The tech year in cartoons/From SOPA to the Petraeus affair, here's a look at some of the year's biggest IT stories from the pen of Computerworld's editorial cartoonist, John Klossner."?Computerworld?12/28
  • "Mobile's Biggest Losers In 2012: The last twelve months have been turbulent for smartphone makers and wireless network providers. Here's who took it on the chin hardest."?InformationWeek?12/28
  • "Drones, phones and other 2012 privacy threats"?Computerworld?12/28
  • "The top 10 trends in enterprise cloud for 2013"?VentureBeat [Free Registration Required]?12/28
  • "Security in 2013: The rise of mobile malware and fall of hacktivism"?PCWorld?12/28
  • "2012''s worst security exploits, fails and blunders"?PCWorld?12/28
  • "10 Biggest Information Security Stories Of 2012: From John McAfee's escape from Belize to the privacy debacle that compromised CIA director Petraeus' career, 2012 had no shortage of security shockers."?InformationWeek?12/28
  • "Video games in 2012: A year of high-octane sequels"?Washington Post [Free Registration Required]?12/28
  • "How Amazon ruined my Christmas: Netflix's Christmas outage is yet another reminder that downtime happens at the worst possible time and the cloud is not inherently resilient."?ZDNet?12/28
  • "Could These 6 Pending Regulations Destroy The Internet In 2013?"?ReadWrite?12/28
  • "After initial flop, does Google+ have a secret weapon for a comeback?"?Beatweek Magazine?12/28
  • "Seriously, Google? Really? How Google's Math Kills The Web As You Know It"?Mac 360?12/28
  • "AUTONOMY UPDATE: Lynch Junks Accounting Fraud Allegations as US Investigation Underway"?FxPips.com?7:43 AM
  • "HP Confirms Subsidiary Autonomy Being Probed By Justice Department"?redOrbit?4:16 PM
  • "It Just Keeps Getting Worse for Hewlett-Packard"?The Motley Fool?7:45 AM
  • "Autonomy's Lynch rejects fraud claims as US probe is launched: Firm's founder hits back at HP"?Irish Independent?7:45 AM
  • "US Justice Department looks into HP's Autonomy acquisition"?PCWorld?9:05 PM
  • "Fujitsu president blames poor sales on 'weak' Windows 8 demand: Windows 8 becoming a scapegoat?"?TechRadar UK?7:50 AM
  • "Windows 8 wrestles with PC's legacy: opinion On a traditional PC, Windows 8 Metro is a solution looking for a problem."?CNET Reviews?8:43 PM
  • "Can Microsoft Go Pro in Tablets in 2013?"?DailyFinance?9:10 PM
  • "Short Microsoft? No, Just Buy The Dips Of This Solid DiVidend Stock"?Seeking Alpha?7:50 AM
  • "Kabini to be 10 percent faster than 28nm Bobcat"?Fudzilla?7:46 AM
  • "Intel's Cable TV Service And Set Top Box Will Soon Roll Out City By City"?TechCrunch?4:19 PM
  • "Intel Reportedly plans to launch its internet TV service in a limited number of cities"?The Verge?6:39 PM
  • "Intel's 'Redhookbay' Spotted in Benchmarks with Android 4.2.1, Dual-Core CPU"?Softpedia?7:47 AM
  • "Intel Redhookbay benchmarks surface, show dual-core Merrifield processor"?SlashGear?7:47 AM
  • "Intel postpones Haswell launch until Computex"?Hardware.info?7:48 AM
  • "Intel Haswell possibly delayed till June 2013"?Tech2?7:49 AM
  • "Intel Haswell CPUs delayed until June 2013"?CPU World?9:07 PM
  • "US judge SLAMS both IBM and the SEC over bribery settlement"?The Register?7:52 AM
  • "4 Reasons Cisco Will Be The #1 IT Company"?Seeking Alpha?7:47 AM
  • "HP Goes Radio Silent Into 2013 on Autonomy Debacle"?TheStreet?12/28
  • "HP confirms DOJ investigation into Autonomy acquisition: HP said in a regulatory filing with the SEC that it has provided information to U.S. and U.K. authorities"?IDG News Service?12/28
  • "Hewlett-Packard Says Justice Department Probing Autonomy"?Bloomberg?12/28
  • "HP discloses US probe into Autonomy"?Financial Times [Paid Membership Required]?12/28
  • "H-P Confirms DOJ Probe Over Autonomy Mess"?FOXBusiness?12/28
  • "HP-Autonomy acquisition under US govt investigation"?ZDNet?12/28
  • "Autonomy's Lynch defends record as HP confirms Federal probe"?Reuters?12/28
  • "HP Has Been Slammed With 10 Lawsuits Over The Autonomy Debacle"?Business Insider?12/28
  • "Year in Review: Windows 8, roadmaps, Office Next top the reader charts"?ZDNet?12/28
  • "You need a touchscreen for Windows 8: Windows 8's best feature isn't being used by most Windows 8 PC owners."?CNNMoney?12/28
  • "Intel to cooperate with HP, Lenovo, Quanta, Compal to launch smart TVs in 2013"?DigiTimes?12/28
  • "This Dumb Year: The 57 Lamest Moments in Tech 2012"?Techland?12/28
  • "2012: The year in application development/Native vs. Web, the rise of GitHub, hard truths for HTML5 -- here's a look back at the year in programming trends" [Slideshow]?InfoWorld?12/28
  • "Top 10 Tech News Stories of 2012: From Apple vs. Samsung to Facebook's IPO, here's what had the tech world talking in 2012."?PC Magazine?12/28
? ?

Source: http://www.macsurfer.com/redirr.php?u=751271

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Carroll University for Google Chrome 0.6.4.9

Carroll University is a Google Chrome and Firefox theme especially designed for Carroll University Athletics fans. It brings all the latest news from Carroll U sports and it integrates with Twitter and Facebook.

Carroll University is an add-on designed to work with the Mozilla Firefox, Google Chrome and Internet Explorer web browsers.

This add-on doesn't require you to restart the web browser.

Product's homepage

Requirements:

? Google Chrome

Source: http://linux.softpedia.com/get/Internet/Google-Chrome-Extensions/Carroll-University-Google-Chrome-95378.shtml

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'No English Science, Maths books' ? Hornbill Unleashed

Joseph Tawie

Fourteen percent of schools in Sarawak have opted to use English in their Maths and Science, but parents doubt the Education Ministry?s commitment to their choice.

With schools set to begin their term next week, parents and teachers in Sarawak are in a dilemma over ?inconsistent? education policies and the lack of English language books for Mathematics and Science subjects.

Some 14% of primary and secondary schools in in East Malaysian state have opted to continue learning Mathematics and Science in English next year, but have failed to receive their English text books todate.

Said Batu Lintang assemblyman See Chee How: ?On this eve of the opening of the new school year, it is discovered that schools in Sarawak have not received their English textbooks and workbooks, but only the Bahasa Malaysia versions were distributed to all the students.

?This is despite the fact that these schools have filled in and submitted a designated form distributed by the Education Department asking them to decide and indicate whether their primary school students from the PPSMI batch chooses to continue PPSMI fully in English, Bahasa Malaysia or both.

?These schools have expressly opted for English language for those students now in Standard 4 to Standard 6.

?In fact, it was the Deputy PM (Muhyiddin Yassin) himself who revealed last year that 5% from the total classes in 7,495 primary schools and 9% out of 2,192 secondary schools chose to fully used English for Maths and Science.

?He is fully aware of the needs and extent of schools requiring textbooks and workbooks in English for the batch of students still under PPSMI policy, yet these textbooks and workbooks are not being printed and distributed.

?The schools were given the textbooks and workbooks in Bahasa Malaysia instead.?

He added that a quick survey in the bookshops had shown that no English reference books are prepared and printed in English, as the profit-driven private companies are switching immediately to produce reference texts and workbooks for the policy of MBMMBI (Upholding the Malay Language, Strengthening the English Language) whereby Mathematics and Science are only taught and learned in Bahasa Malaysia.

?Muhyiddin is worst Education Minister?

See, who is also state PKR vice president, said parents were now doubtful as to whether or not the Education Department has the contents and syllabus of the books prepared.

?The schools and parents can?t be blamed for their doubts and queries as to whether the education department is going to supply the requisite textbooks and workbooks in English to these schools.

?There are even doubts whether the education department has the syllabus and contents of the textbooks and workbooks prepared and whether it is printing them,? he said.

See said the availability of Malay language books on the subjects meant teachers and parents were forced to translate the syllabus and contents, according to their own respective understanding and perception of the Bahasa Malaysia texts.

?It certainly reflects poorly on the Umno-led BN federal government. The Education Ministry should have the proper planning in the formulation and implementation of the country?s education policies and plans.

?The Deputy PM and Education Minister (Muhyiddin) has failed to appreciate the sensitivity and special needs in the East Malaysian states, particularly Sarawak, where English is also an official language and that special rights to use English is cherished and dear to Sarawakians.

?The inconsistency in the formulation and implementation of the educational policies, regulations, guidelines and instructions are the hallmark of his ministership. He is the country?s worst Education Minister,? he said .

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Source: http://hornbillunleashed.wordpress.com/2012/12/30/39440/

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Trade A Bit Of Facebook Privacy For Free Samsung TecTiles, Flip Covers

samsungtectilesThe gift-giving has ended as we head into the new year, but many of us still need to pick up a few things. For example, if you happen to be a new owner of the Galaxy S III or Galaxy Note II, you probably need a few extra NFC-powered TecTiles and perhaps a brand new flip cover. Samsung has announced that it will give away free six TecTiles and a flip cover for every customer that registers their Galaxy S III or Galaxy Note II to Samsung's Owner's Hub on Facebook. That means that you'll be giving Samsung some personal info, like access to your Facebook Timeline, in exchange for the swag.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/U5BbOvTeFQw/

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Sunday, December 30, 2012

Mantra takes the stage as arts and entertainment partners

Mantra forges a relationship with The Mousetrap company. Image supplied

Mantra forges a relationship with The Mousetrap company: Sales Manager Beau Keller and Sales/Marketing Executive Michelle Doyle Jones with members of?The Mousetrap Company.

As any touring performer knows, moving interstate for work means packing your suitcase for several months (or years!) and living in what is known in the industry as ?Company Accommodation?. Making a new apartment your home away from home every few months is not the easiest of tasks, but Mantra Hotels are planning on helping artists across the nation do just that as they forge partnerships with major Arts and Entertainment industry brands.

The most recent partnership is with the acclaimed Diamond Anniversary Australasian Tour of The Mousetrap,?which opened in Brisbane last?night.

The show?s production team, cast and crew will make Mantra South Bank their home throughout the season at QPAC?s Playhouse Theatre just as they did at?Mantra on the Park in Melbourne and Mantra on Northbourne in Canberra during their seasons in the southern capitals.

?The Mantra Apartment properties provide a great opportunity for our companies to feel as much at home as possible as they tour the country? said Producer Louise Withers, praising the partnership for benefitting the company both commercially and personally.

Mantra?s Beau Keller who heads up the Sport & Entertainment sales portfolio, told AussieTheatre that the Mantra Arts Partnerships began several years ago, but that his personal interest in the arts has helped develop the idea into a more solid?model.

?Mantra have always been supportive of touring shows around Australia? he?said.

?I guess since I have come on board the fact that I love theatre and seeing shows helps because I have been able to break down the correct door and speak to the right people to get the accommodation partnerships contracts all started.?

Keller explained that while the main partnership involve Mantra accommodating cast and crew and management team, they also assist with ?in kind? marketing of the?shows.

?For The?Mousetrap we have porters, key wallets and book marks all printed and distrubuted through the regions hotels well in advance of the show, as well as other inside hotel features such as tv showing ads for the shows?, he?said.

To date, Mantra Hotels have provided full sponsorship, marketing and accommodation partnerships with major productions such as, MAMMA MIA!, Hairspray, the English National Ballet and Global Creatures? How To Train Your Dragon.

The relationship with Global Creatures will continue in 2013 when Mantra will accommodate cast and crew for War Horse and King Kong. Other cast and crew accommodation partnerships have also been forged with Cirque du Soleil, Moonshadow and Annie the Musical?in Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane and Canberra. With hotels located in all capital cities, Mantra is well placed to accommodate national touring productions.

?Mantra hopes to become the 1st choice for current producers and directors to use us as accommodation provider when they are putting together tours around Australia because our hotels are perfect for long stay guests?, Keller said.

Mantra?s Arts and Entertainment partnerships don?t end with the performers and crew ? as official accommodation partner for The Mousetrap,?Mantra is also offering Brisbane theatre goers?ticket and accommodation packages.

The Mousetrap will play at The Playhouse, QPAC until 20 January

Visit themousetrap.com.au for more details and tickets

Visit mantra.com.au for accommodation packages

Erin has written 1,041 articles on AussieTheatre

Read more articles by Erin James

Source: http://aussietheatre.com.au/news/mantra-takes-the-stage-as-arts-and-entertainment-partners/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=mantra-takes-the-stage-as-arts-and-entertainment-partners

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15 Internet Production eBooks | Land Of Freebies

A year end special offer: a collection of 15 ebooks ranging from domain to blogging; jv to membership site; affordable marketing to offline marketing. This special bundle is priced extremely low. Don?t Miss it!? Even just one of these ebooks would be worth the price?.

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Source: http://landoffreebies.co.uk/deals/15-internet-production-ebooks

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The Renaissance Man Who Got It All Wrong

Copyright ? 2012 National Public Radio. For personal, noncommercial use only. See Terms of Use. For other uses, prior permission required.

IRA FLATOW, HOST:

This is SCIENCE FRIDAY; I'm Ira Flatow. You've heard of Leonardo, Michelangelo, Galileo, Newton, maybe even Pascal and Hooke, all Renaissance men who, between them, innovated in painting, sculpture, physics, math, chemistry, astronomy, architecture, philosophy, the list goes on. But how about Athanasius Kircher? Yeah, have you heard of him? Not ringing - no bells are ringing?

Well, he was a contemporary of many of these greats and a priest and a scholar who studied Egyptian hieroglyphics, magnetism, philosophy, music. He studied the blood of plague victims through an early microscope. He even hiked into the smoking crater of Mount Vesuvius to pursue his study of volcanoes and magma. Maybe a little crazy like a lot of other pioneers.

Impressive r?sum?, right? The only problem is he got a lot of stuff wrong. Whoops. You can read about his misadventures in my next guest's new book, "A Man of Misconceptions: The Life of an Eccentric in an Age of Change." Very entertaining. John Glassie is the author of "A Man of Misconceptions" and a former contributing editor at the New York Times Magazine. He joins us in our New York studios. Welcome to SCIENCE FRIDAY.

JOHN GLASSIE: Thank you very much.

FLATOW: Tell us about why don't - we haven't heard of this guy? He did all that stuff, we never heard of him.

GLASSIE: Well, it's a good question. Historians have become increasingly interested in him in the last couple of decades, I would say, but, you know, there wasn't a popular sort of version of his story out there. So I - that was one reason why I felt like I had to do it. I think he isn't a household name or even remember mainly because, you know, he didn't have one single achievement that he could be remembered for.

But he did play a pretty significant role in many different fields.

FLATOW: But if he was wrong in so many of them, how can he play a role in those fields?

GLASSIE: Well, there are a couple of different ways, maybe, in which that could be. One is I've begun to feel a little bit guilty about the title of my book, "A Man of Misconceptions."

(LAUGHTER)

GLASSIE: And I'm very fond of this fellow, and...

FLATOW: He's growing on you.

GLASSIE: Yes, absolutely. Well, after working on it for some time, you know, that's probably what happens. But, you know, he wasn't wrong about everything. He was a man of misconceptions certainly, but that's kind of a conceit that through the course of the book I begin to undermine because you realize that many of his misconceptions were misconceptions of the time, many people held them, and they're misconceptions really from our modernist point of view.

And this was just a crazy, crazy time. So it's really about a kind of perspective. It's a mindset that I was trying to sort of get into with the story of this fellow.

FLATOW: Give us a flavor of the time. What was going on around his peers and going on in the world at that time?

GLASSIE: Well, I mean, you can start off, he was born on the eve of a witch hunt, and...

FLATOW: Not a good start.

(LAUGHTER)

GLASSIE: In 1602, you know, and he was - you know, he was steeped in a lot of the, you know, the mystical and magical thinking of the pre-scientific era. 1602, you know, that's several years before Galileo published "Starry Messenger," you know, the - his observations of the four moons around Jupiter and so on. And he died in 1680. That was several years before Newton published the "Principia."

So this is - he lived 78 years, whatever that was. This is really the period that we now have a two-word label for, the scientific revolution. So he was steeped in these older notions, but he actually did - he adopted, he was an early adopter of technologies like the celestial tube, as they called it, or the telescope, the microscope.

And - but he was probably still too steeped in the -in sort of the older methodologies to really make too much progress in what...

FLATOW: The world was changing or just changing around him, and he couldn't keep up with it, and...

GLASSIE: He couldn't keep up with it, yeah, although he certainly tried. I mean, you know, this guy had more energy than I've ever, you know, than you can imagine. And, you know, he published something like 30 books in almost as many subjects. You mentioned a lot of them.

FLATOW: Right.

GLASSIE: And he - those books served as sort of benchmarks of learning of the time. They were encyclopedias on whatever it was: optics, even music, that kind of thing. And even though they contained many propositions that could then be proven wrong by experiment, which is by the way a pretty valuable service in a way, you know, they were important works that almost all the major figures of that time had to contend with.

FLATOW: You've likened him to a kind of Forest Gump of the 17th century.

GLASSIE: I have, yeah. I mean, well, the thing is - the only difference is that Forest Gump, you know, was this innocent, na?ve, you know, sort of - had a kind of pure quality to his character. Kircher was a courtier, a careerist. He was not above fibbing if it suited him to get ahead in his career. But he was, in the way that Forest Gump was, kind of one or two degrees of separation away from so many kind of characteristic moments of the time and also as well as people.

So as I say, you know, born on the eve of a witch hunt, he was kind of thrown around in the turmoil of the 30 Years War. He arrived in Rome in 1633 just months after the Galileo trial. He was in Rome in 1656 for the plague, you mentioned the plague, and...

FLATOW: And he survived.

GLASSIE: He survived, yeah. Well, they actually - the entire city went - they had a fairly sophisticated sort of system in place to try and shut it down, and 15,000 people died in Rome apparently at that time. At the same time, in Naples, something like 150,000 to 250,000 people died. So Rome actually had a very sophisticated system in place.

But he did survive that, and that's when he looked at a lot of the plague victims under a microscope, which was probably the first time anybody had every looked at human blood through a microscope.

FLATOW: And what did he actually examine? Did he make an observation and a contribution after the observation?

GLASSIE: Well, he did. You know, it's not clear how sophisticated the microscope was that he was using, whether it was a compound microscope, even, and it's not clear entirely what he saw. But he claimed to have seen an innumerable number of invisible little worms, and he determined from that that plague, and that all disease, was a living thing.

And so he's been - there's a debate. I've said, you know, I don't know - it's ongoing. I don't know how active it is, you know, about whether he should be given credit for the germ theory of disease.

FLATOW: Instead of Pasteur, who came later.

GLASSIE: That's right, yeah.

FLATOW: Yeah, oh, so he saw something, didn't know what they were, but he thought that's how they - this spread from one person to another, through these little worms or something.

GLASSIE: That's right, and this actually was connected to his - he had sort of animistic kind of view of the world, and it was connected to something that he called universal sperm, this notion that there were little seed-like things, but life force, without and about, you know, most everything, kind of bizarre.

FLATOW: Talking with John Glassie, author of "A Man of Misconceptions: The Life of an Eccentric in an Age of Change." Is it true that Kircher actually coined the term electromagnetism?

GLASSIE: Yes, I thought so until today, when I was checking it.

(LAUGHTER)

GLASSIE: And it looks like...

FLATOW: Never quite ever done with anything. I know how that is.

(LAUGHTER)

GLASSIE: Well no, it's - I think so, and there's a general consensus that yes, although - but as I say, I saw something today that suggests that maybe William Gilbert, you know, who wrote about magnetism, he wrote in this important work in 1601 about magnetism. But, you know, it's not, it's not the amazing coinage that we sort of think of, in a way.

Electron is the Greek word for amber, right.

FLATOW: Right.

GLASSIE: Which when you rub it, you know, against different materials or whatever, it creates static electricity. So this was, you know, just a way of describing a phenomenon that, you know, he saw was related to magnetic attraction and repulsion.

FLATOW: This is SCIENCE FRIDAY from NPR. I'm Ira Flatow. Tell me the story about the sunflower seed clock, something that I think might be better suited to Ripley's Believe It Or Not! than the halls of science.

GLASSIE: Yes. Well, it's a great story. He came out - he arrived in France in 1633. If I go on too long, just - you'll have to just stop me.

FLATOW: Mm-hmm. I love these stories. Go ahead.

GLASSIE: He arrived in France in 1633 after - sort of as a refugee from the Thirty Years' War, came into sort of - came into the fold - under the fold of some French sort of experimental philosophers, and he talked up the sunflower seed clock to them.

FLATOW: A clock made out of sunflower seeds.

GLASSIE: What it was is that the seed was supposed to be able to drive the clock. And the idea was that the - that in the same way that the sunflower, the flower itself, turns and follows the sun during the course of the day, that the seed had the same property. He actually attributed it to a kind magnetic attraction of the sun. He believed - this connects, again, to almost this notion of universal sperm that I was talking to you...

FLATOW: Right, right.

GLASSIE: ...these invisible energies, these kind of cosmic influences and attractions and repulsions. So the notion was that the seed contained - you know, was pulled by the sun to drive up a clock. The seed was embedded in a cork in a tub of water, and it was shown, in certain cases, you know, to, when he displayed it, to - no matter which way, whatever you did with the cork, it would go right back and display the accurate time.

FLATOW: Wow.

GLASSIE: But it was really a parlor trick because there was also a magnet embedded in the cork. And so if he had enough time beforehand to set this parlor trick up, before people arrived to see it, he would figure out, relative to magnetic north, where the sun would be, and he would set it up so that it would always show the correct time.

FLATOW: Was there money on these things riding on it? Are you going to make any money from, you know, for being a charlatan in that sense?

GLASSIE: Well, I think that - it's funny, you know? I mean, I think that what he wanted to do was I think he wanted to try to convey what he actually believed the truth was about the way the universe worked, that there were, indeed, these kinds of energies. And even if he could not make a sunflower seed drive a clock, it was an analogy.

FLATOW: Yeah. Ah.

GLASSIE: This was the kind of thing that he wanted people to understand. Well, this happened to be at the time of the Galileo trial, by the way, and people kind of twigged on this as a way - that, you know, maybe there was something here. If this was true, then maybe this could actually help make Galileo's case...

FLATOW: Ah.

GLASSIE: ...that the sun had this attractive power. And so among sort of French intellectuals, there was a bunch of correspondent - correspondence. Mersenne, now famous for his prime numbers, wrote to Descartes and talked to him about this, and Descartes responded, said, well, thank you very much for having written to me about this. I find this to be very fascinating. If it's true, it's certainly, you know, very curious and wonderful, although I don't - I'm not convinced that this is the case, though I don't hold it to be impossible.

FLATOW: Yeah.

GLASSIE: And then, in fact, even years later when Kircher published his major work on magnetism, Descartes read sort of an enhanced description of the sunflower seed clock and wrote to - I don't know if it was Constantjin or Christiaan Huygens right in my mind right now, but he had correspondence about this, and he said, you know, I heard about this sunflower seed clock several years ago.

Father, you know, Mersenne wrote to me about it. I still don't think it's possible, on and on and on. But it - and, you know, he was making it sound as if it was completely absurd, but it wasn't so absurd that he didn't...

FLATOW: Yeah.

GLASSIE: ...want to try it himself.

FLATOW: That's right.

GLASSIE: So Descartes tried this thing. It's - well, it turns out, of course, it did not work.

FLATOW: Yeah. Of course not.

(LAUGHTER)

FLATOW: This is SCIENCE FRIDAY from NPR, talking with John Glassie, author of "A Man of Misconceptions: The Life of an Eccentric in an Age of Change." Speaking of an eccentric, you write in him about how he hiked into the smoking crater of Mount Vesuvius.

GLASSIE: Indeed he did.

FLATOW: Everybody's a little nutty.

GLASSIE: Well, not to mention this is in the aftermath of a devastating Earthquake in 1638 in Southern Italy there. He had been down in Malta and on Sicily, exploring the caves, the catacombs, the grottoes, the inland seas, the underground passageways and so forth. He was beginning to develop theories about the interior of the Earth.

FLATOW: So he went down there to explore.

GLASSIE: So he went down there. There was only one way to find out.

FLATOW: To go down there and take a hike.

GLASSIE: And get some empirical evidence and go on down there.

FLATOW: Wasn't he afraid of the lava or anything that might come out of that?

GLASSIE: Well, I think he was, but, you know, look, he was a, you know, he was a crackpot, but he was a - someone who had genuine passion for knowledge. He had sort of, you know, the right idea, you know, as far as that goes. And, you know, he described - there's, you know, these great passages about - you know, that he wrote about that exploration.

You know, he said that he felt that he was, you know, facing the habitation of hell. And he describes the sulfurous odors and the, you know, the racket, the noise and rackets of the rocks falling into the, you know, the molten lava and so forth. It's fantastic.

FLATOW: So he was actually that close to the lava.

GLASSIE: Well, I don't know how close he was, frankly, but it was inside the, you know, the crater of Vesuvius, that I think, you know, he really began to develop his notion of the - you know, what the interior of the Earth was like. And, you know, these were theories that he ended up publishing, I guess, about 30 years later in a major work called "Mundus Subterraneus," you know, which means just subterranean world or underground world. And that was kind of a major work of what we call - now call geology, and he published - excuse me - he published these wonderful, sort of, schematic diagrams of the Earth with networks of fires and also ocean leading all the way down into the center of the Earth.

FLATOW: Oceans of lava?

GLASSIE: Oceans of water.

FLATOW: Of water, going down into the center of the Earth.

GLASSIE: There were this, you know, there was a symbiotic system going on down there in his mind.

FLATOW: Well, if you want to - we're run out of time, but you want to read lots more about this. I highly recommend reading John Glassie's book, "A Man of Misconceptions: The Life of an Eccentric in the Age of Change." And that guy is - say it for me, Athanaius(ph).

GLASSIE: Athanasius.

FLATOW: See, I going to close, Athanasius Kircher.

GLASSIE: That's right.

FLATOW: Thank you for taking time to do this today.

GLASSIE: Thanks so much.

FLATOW: You're welcome. Stay with us. After the break, we're going to talk about the psychology of New Year's resolutions, why it's so hard to keep it? Stay with us. This is SCIENCE FRIDAY from NPR.

Copyright ? 2012 National Public Radio. All rights reserved. No quotes from the materials contained herein may be used in any media without attribution to National Public Radio. This transcript is provided for personal, noncommercial use only, pursuant to our Terms of Use. Any other use requires NPR's prior permission. Visit our permissions page for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by a contractor for NPR, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of NPR's programming is the audio.

Source: http://www.npr.org/2012/12/28/168203193/the-renaissance-man-who-got-it-all-wrong?ft=1&f=1007

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