Friday, September 28, 2012

Camera+ Arrives on the iPad

Camera+ -- one of the most popular photo apps for the iPhone -- is now available for the iPad.

[More from Mashable: Netflix Updates App for iPhone 5 and iOS 6]

The iPad app comes a little over two years after the original app. In that time, Camera+ [iTunes link] has gone on to sell over 9 million copies, making it the most popular paid photo app in the App Store.

Today, tap tap tap, the crew behind Camera+, has released the long-anticipated iPad version [iTunes link] of the app.

[More from Mashable: Lasers Blast iPhone 5 in Brutal Showdown [VIDEO]]

So why would you want a photo app on the iPad? Not so much for taking pictures as for editing them.

Sure, Camera+ can help users take better photos with the iPad (especially if you use the improved rear camera on the retina iPad) But the real benefit is that the app syncs seamlessly with Camera+ for iPhone.

Camera+'s Lightbox syncs between devices using iCloud. If you take a photo on your iPhone, so long as iCloud sync is enabled, you can see that same image on your iPad. Moreover, any edits made to the photos will be synced across devices. Deleting a photo from one Lightbox will remove it across the board.

Camera+ for iPhone has also received an update for the iPhone 5's screen -- a welcome update for users such as myself who use it as a replacement for Apple's default camera app.

One of the best parts of the new iPad is its retina display. Even now, six months after its release, I still find myself marveling at the clarity of photographs on it.

This is where Camera+ for iPad really shines. The iCloud integration means the full-sized images are viewable within the app. Thanks to the high resolution display, I can view nearly full-sized images from the iPhone 5 within Camera+, each detail beautifully displayed.

From there, you can start playing around with various settings that adjust how an image looks. This includes Camera+'s excellent "Clarity" mode -- which just makes images and colors pop.

A new feature for the iPad is the ability to layer effects on top of one another. That means I can add a fade effect and cross-process, and adjust the intensity of both. (Apps such as Snapseed have had that ability for a long time. Still, it's great to have it in Camera+ too.)

I can't wait to spend more time with Camera+ on my iPad. In its first iteration, the app already pairs seamlessly with Camera+ for iPhone and offers users a great way to edit photos and share them across various social networks.

And yes, you can take photos using the iPad and Camera+. You just might look silly doing it.

Camera+ for iPad and Camera+ for iPhone are both on sale for $0.99 in the App Store. What are you favorite photo apps for iOS? Let us know in the comments.

This story originally published on Mashable here.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/camera-arrives-ipad-232647118.html

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Mexico nabs high-ranking cartel member 'El Taliban'

Alfredo Estrella / AFP - Getty Images

Ivan Velazquez Caballero, aka "Z 50" or "El Taliban" (second from the right), senior leader in the Zetas drug cartel and member of the Gulf cartel, is presented to the press at the Mexican Navy headquarters in Mexico City, on Sept. 27, 2012.

By Reuters

MEXICO CITY - The Mexican navy said on Wednesday it had captured one of the leaders of the Zetas drug cartel, a notoriously brutal gang reported to be breaking apart due to an internal feud.

The navy said it had caught the man it believed to be Zetas boss Ivan Velazquez in the central state of San Luis Potosi, in a boost to outgoing President Felipe Calderon's efforts to crack down on the violent cartels.

The Zetas have perpetrated some of the most sickening acts of Mexico's drug war and continued to expand even as rival gangs joined forces against them. They are now regarded as one of the two most powerful drug cartels in the country.

Velazquez is due to be paraded before the media on Thursday morning as is customary with such captures in Mexico.

Mexico's drug war is also part of a drug culture with roots in music, movies and even religion

132 inmates tunnel out of Mexico prison near US border

The suspected gang leader surrendered to the navy in the city of San Luis Potosi without a shot being fired, an eyewitness told Reuters.

Known as "Z-50" or "El Taliban," Velazquez has been one of the leading figures in the Zetas. Formed by a group of army deserters in the late 1990s, the gang acted as enforcers for the Gulf Cartel before splitting with their employers in 2010.

Longstanding rivalry between the Zetas' top leader, Heriberto Lazcano, and his second-in-command Miguel Trevino has exploded into violence, raising fears the hostilities could bring a fresh wave of bloodletting.

President: Mexico gang-related deaths fall by 15 percent in 2012

Switched allegiance
The Zetas boast 10,000-plus gunmen, and the prospect of them fighting for control of local trafficking networks and smuggling routes has alarmed security experts.

However, the split also brings benefits for the government, as members of the gang inform against former colleagues.

A video "mockumentary" that shows children as kidnappers, corrupt cops and drug traffickers sparked a fierce debate in violence-torn Mexico. Msnbc.com's Dara Brown reports.

Earlier this week, Mexican news magazine Proceso reported that Velazquez had switched his allegiance to the Gulf Cartel due to a rupture with Trevino, citing messages posted online.

Velazquez is listed by the government as one of the country's most-wanted drug kingpins. The Mexican government has offered a reward of up to 30 million pesos ($2.34 million) for information leading to his arrest.

U.S. Department of Treasury via AP

Ivan Velazquez Caballero, known as "El Taliban."

Debate rages over Mexico 'spillover violence' in US

Since 2009, more than 20 drug lords have been caught or killed. The most recent capture came two weeks ago, when the navy arrested Gulf Cartel head Jorge Costilla, alias "El Coss."

Earlier on Wednesday, the navy announced the capture of 18 suspected Zetas in the northern state of Nuevo Leon.

Mexico's drug war: No sign of 'light at the end of the tunnel'

How to contain the threat posed by the drug gangs is one of the main challenges facing Calderon's successor Enrique Pena Nieto, who is due to take office on December 1.

About 60,000 people have been killed in drug-related violence during Calderon's six-year term.

Lemon Pie, a dog whose two front legs were allegedly cut off by a gang in Mexico, got prosthetic legs after more than $8,000 was raised for him.

More world stories from NBC News:

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Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/09/27/14119895-mexico-nabs-high-ranking-zetas-drug-gang-member-el-taliban?lite

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Candidates Exchange Barbs on Patriotism (WSJ)

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Thursday, September 27, 2012

1 Billion computers at risk from Java exploit | News Channel - Mind ...

A new zero-day exploit in multiple versions of Java puts roughly 1 billion users at risk to attackers and malicious code.

1 Billion computers at risk from Java exploit
The flaw was discovered by researchers at Poland?s Security Explorations, a security firm that already has a known penchant for unearthing flaws in Java?s notoriously buggy programming language.

In April, the security firm found another zero-day Java exploit that affected only Java 7, which wasn?t made public until August. This latest flaw is worse in that it leaves all supported versions of Java (Java 5, 6 and 7) on most desktop platforms (Windows, Mac, Linux and Solaris) vulnerable to criminals.

Security experts had previously advised Java users to downgrade to Java 6 to avoid the previous flaw, but that will no longer protect computers from attack.

[Should You Disable Java On Your Computer?]

The exploit works in all major browsers, including Internet Explorer, Safari, Firefox, Chrome and Opera. Mac users of Lion or Mountain Lion who installed Java after purchase are also vulnerable. (Apple stopped bundling Java into its operating system after Snow Leopard, Mac OS X 10.6.)

Security Explorations CEO Adam Gowdiak, who went public with the vulnerability yesterday (Sept. 25), said it works by achieving ?a complete Java security sandbox bypass.?

Sandboxing is a mechanism that runs programs in an isolated environment with limited access to other programs and to the computer?s sensitive files and code to prevent a potentially corrupt program from infecting the entire machine.

The Polish security firm?s exploit discovery last month prompted Oracle, the owners of Java, to issue a once-in-a-blue-moon ?out-of-band? security patch on Aug. 30. The next one is scheduled to be pushed out Oct. 16, the soonest Java users should expect to see this new hole plugged.

After the previous Java exploit was disclosed in August, leading to a wave of attacks, Security Explorations claimed that they had discovered the same security hole months before and warned Oracle about it, Sophos? Naked Security blog reported.

Oracle failed to address the issue quickly and when they did, Security Explorations demonstrated that the ?rushed patch? could still be overcome.

When Web browsing first became widely adopted by the public, getting around without Java would have been difficult. Now, many people don?t even know whether Java runs on their browser or not.

To find out, you?ll need to check your settings. On PCs, Java settings are found under the Control Panel. For Macs, they?re under Utilities.

To see whether you even need Java, try disabling it entirely. If it doesn?t disrupt your computer usage, leave it off; if it does, you can always turn it back on. (You can check to see if your browser is running Java by visiting Oracle?s website.)

Another way to mitigate your risk is to keep Java plug-ins running only on a browser you rarely use. When you need it for online use, use that browser; when you don?t, stick with your regular one.

Developed by Sun Microsystems as a self-contained platform and programming language in 1995, Java let users and organizations run programs across a variety of operating systems without glitches or corruption.

But as competing technologies such as Macromedia (later Adobe) Flash and Shockwave were adopted, Java became less ubiquitous. (Oracle bought Sun in 2009.)

With the current, but slow, rollout of the HTML 5 Web standard, which supports all manner of audio, video and other user interactivity directly in the browser, Java and Flash are likely to soon be obsolete.

Source: http://news.mindprocessors.com/technology-news/1-billion-computers-at-risk-from-java-exploit/

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10 Reasons to Do What You Love for a Living

You've heard this career mantra before:? Do what you love and the money will follow. But as any aspiring poet or starving artist can tell you, it just isn't that easy. Finding a way to do what you love and still make enough money to support a family can be a real challenge. Still, many experts say finding a way to follow your career bliss is worth the effort.

People who do what they love for a living tend to live happier, more productive lives, these experts say.

And those who don't are often made sick by working at jobs they hate.

Here are 10 reasons why it is important to strive to find a way to do what you love for a living (or, at the very least, find way to love what you already do).

Your self-esteem improves

Those who do what they love for a living end up feeling better about themselves, said Sherry Mirshahi-Totten, a career advancement coach and the CEO and founder of Roadmap Career Services.

"Your own self-esteem will be higher because you will feel energized by what you do, and your employer will be more prone to rewarding you for it," Mirshahi-Totten said.

You will be motivated

Ellen Ercolini, a career and life coach, believes it's important to do something you love for a living because when the going gets tough (as it assuredly will), you'll be motivated to push through.

"Instead of being overwhelmed with stress for a job that you don't even like, which affects other areas of your life, you have the connection and inspiration to make it work," Ercolini said.

You become a valued employee

A business's best asset is an employee who loves his or her job, said Mary Hladio, founder and president of Ember Carriers Leadership Group, an organizational performance consulting firm.

"Someone who genuinely loves their job is more satisfied and likely more motivated and productive during their time at work," Hladio said. "It is unlikely that they will complain or begrudgingly complete tasks at the minimum level of effort, and instead they will be engaged in their work, proactive and, furthermore, interested in motivating co-workers in the mission and goals."

You earn more money

Professional coach and author Karen Garvey said loving what you do can have a significant positive impact on your wallet.

"The angst of hating one's role often leads to an inability to manifest promotions, sales, raises, etc.," Garvey told BusinessNewsDaily.

Your overall health is better

Author Walter Meyer said having a job you love plays a role in your overall health.

"The tension and pain of doing a job every day that you detest has to take its toll in terms of higher blood pressure, headaches and the rest," Meyer said.

[7 Ways to Improve Your Work-Life Balance]

You garner more respect

People who love their jobs often spend extra time making sure they are doing their best work, which executive coach Kathi Elster said will undoubtedly be noticed by supervisors and peers.

"You tend to go above and beyond what is expected, gaining the respect of those you work with," Elster said.

You have a better home life

Personal and business coach Melissa Heisler believes employees who have a job they love will also have a more enjoyable home life.

"Instead of coming home with stress and tension headaches, we return home at night with more energy for ourselves and our families," Heisler said.

You are more productive

Cheryl Palmer, a career coach and professional r?sum? writer, said employees who do something they enjoy for a living end up as more productive employees.

"Studies have shown that employees who are engaged in their work have a higher productivity rate," Palmer said. "Especially since employers are asking more of their employees than before, it helps to love what you do so that you can meet the challenges of the job."

You have improved mental health

As an expert in organizational culture and a professor in the W. P. Carey School of Business at Arizona State University, Angelo Kinicki said doing what they love helps employees remain mentally healthy.

"It is important to do something we love for a living because our work lives will then provide meaning and purpose, which are associated with psychological well-being and health," Kinicki said.

He points to Viktor Frankl's book, "Man's Search for Meaning," which notes people need a guiding purpose in order to live a happy and health life.

[8 Ways Your Job May be Killing You]

You can serve others better

Finance consultant Derek Olsen believes consumers naturally gravitate more toward employees who love their job than toward those who don't.

"The person who loves their job is much more likely to be better at doing the job," Olsen said. "That means more quality goods and better service for the customer."

This story was provided by BusinessNewsDaily, a sister site to LivScience. Follow Chad Brooks on Twitter @cbrooks76 or BusinessNewsDaily @BNDarticles. We're also on Facebook & Google+.

Copyright 2012 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/10-reasons-love-living-144928776.html

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Netanyahu warns it's 'very late' to stop a nuclear Iran

UNITED NATIONS (AP) ? Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned Thursday that Iran will have enough enriched uranium to make a nuclear bomb by next summer and urged the world to draw a clear "red line" to stop it in its tracks.

Saying it was getting "late, very late" to stop Iran, Netanyahu flashed a diagram showing the progress Iran has made toward creating a bomb. He said Iran had already completed the first stage of uranium enrichment, and then he drew his own red line on the diagram to highlight the point of no return ? the completion of the second stage and 90 percent enrichment.

"Iran is 70 percent of the way there and ... well into the second stage. By next summer, at current enrichment rates, they will have finished the medium enrichment and move on to the final stage," Netanyahu said. "From there it is only a few more weeks before they have enriched enough for a bomb."

Netanyahu has repeatedly argued that time is running out to stop the Islamic Republic from becoming a nuclear power and the threat of force must be seriously considered.

"I believe that faced with a clear red line, Iran will back down ? and it will give more time for sanctions and diplomacy," the Israeli prime minister said. "Red lines don't lead to war, red lines prevent war ... nothing could imperil the world more than a nuclear-armed Iran."

Netanyahu's speech marks perhaps his final plea before Israel takes matters into its own hands. Israeli leaders have issued a series of warnings in recent weeks suggesting that if Iran's uranium enrichment program continues it may soon stage a unilateral military strike, flouting even American wishes.

The Obama administration has urgently sought to hold off Israeli military action, which would likely result in the U.S. being pulled into a conflict and cause region-wide mayhem on the eve of American elections.

Israel considers a nuclear-armed Iran to be an existential threat, citing Iranian denials of the Holocaust, its calls for Israel's destruction, its development of missiles capable of striking the Jewish state and its support for hostile Arab militant groups.

"Given this record of Iranian aggression without nuclear weapons, just imagine Iranian aggression with nuclear weapons," Netanyahu said.

Iran insists its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes but Israel, the U.S. and other Western allies reject the claim. Four rounds of U.N. sanctions have already been placed on Iran.

A U.N. report last month only reinforced Israeli fears, finding that Iran has moved more of its uranium enrichment activities into fortified bunkers deep underground where there are impervious to air attack. Enrichment is a key activity in building a bomb, though it has other uses as well, such as producing medical isotopes.

While Israel is convinced that Iran is pursuing a nuclear weapon, American officials believe Iran has not yet made a final decision to take the plunge, even as it develops much of the infrastructure needed to do so.

Obama has repeatedly said he will not allow Iran to gain nuclear weapons and has said the U.S. would be prepared to use force as a last resort.Israel's timeline for military action is shorter than that of the United States, which has far more powerful bunker-busting bombs at its disposal, and there is great suspicion in Israel over whether in the moment of truth Obama will follow through on his pledge.

Speaking shortly before Netanyahu, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas accused Israel of ethnic cleansing for building settlements in east Jerusalem.

"It is a campaign of ethnic cleansing against the Palestinian people via the demolition of their homes," Abbas said in his speech to the U.N. General Assembly.

Netanyahu rebuked Abbas in his own address, saying: "We won't solve our conflict with libelous speeches at the U.N."

Israel conquered the eastern part of Jerusalem from Jordan during the 1967 Mideast War. It later annexed it but the move has not been internationally recognized. The Palestinians want east Jerusalem to the capital of their future state in the West Bank.

Abbas also said he has opened talks on a new bid for international recognition at the U.N., but didn't specify exactly when he will ask the General Assembly to vote.

"Intensive consultations with the various regional organizations and the state members" were underway, he said.

The Palestinians will apply to the General Assembly for nonmember state status.

That stands in sharp contrast to last year, when they asked the Security Council to admit them as a full member state, but the bid failed.

Abbas insisted that the new quest for recognition was "not seeking to delegitimize Israel, but rather establish a state that should be established: Palestine."

Palestinian officials said their bid is likely to be submitted on Nov. 29.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/netanyahu-says-world-must-draw-red-line-iran-183329844.html

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Fix the Machine, Not the Person [Behavior]

Fix the Machine, Not the PersonWhen people mess up, we often react by getting angry and yelling at them. We want to change the way they're acting. As Aaron Swartz illustrates, responding with anger just makes people more defiant. The key is to fix the situation, not the person?whether that means changing how you behave, bringing another person into the mix, or revamping entire plans.

The GM Experiment

The General Motors plant in Fremont was a disaster. "Everything was a fight," the head of the union admits. "They spent more time on grievances and on things like that than they did on producing cars. They had strikes all the time. It was just chaos constantly. ?It was considered the worst workforce in the automobile industry in the United States."

"One of the expressions was, you can buy anything you want in the GM plant in Fremont," adds Jeffrey Liker, a professor who studied the plant. "If you want sex, if you want drugs, if you want alcohol, it's there. During breaks, during lunch time, if you want to gamble illegally-any illegal activity was available for the asking within that plant." Absenteeism was so bad that some mornings they didn't have enough employees to start the assembly line; they had to go across the street and drag people out of the bar.

When management tried to punish workers, workers tried to punish them right back: scratching cars, loosening parts in hard-to-reach places, filing union grievances, sometimes even building cars unsafely. It was war.

In 1982, GM finally closed the plant. But the very next year, when Toyota was planning to start its first plant in the US, it decided to partner with GM to reopen it, hiring back the same old disastrous workers into the very same jobs. And so began the most fascinating experiment in management history.

Toyota flew this rowdy crew to Japan, to see an entirely different way of working: The Toyota Way. At Toyota, labor and management considered themselves on the same team; when workers got stuck, managers didn't yell at them, but asked how they could help and solicited suggestions. It was a revelation. "You had union workers-grizzled old folks that had worked on the plant floor for 30 years, and they were hugging their Japanese counterparts, just absolutely in tears," recalls their Toyota trainer. "And it might sound flowery to say 25 years later, but they had had such a powerful emotional experience of learning a new way of working, a way that people could actually work together collaboratively?as a team."

Three months after they got back to the US and reopened the plant, everything had changed. Grievances and absenteeism fell away and workers started saying they actually enjoyed coming to work. The Fremont factory, once one of the worst in the US, had skyrocketed to become the best. The cars they made got near-perfect quality ratings. And the cost to make them had plummeted. It wasn't the workers who were the problem; it was the system.1

An organization is not just a pile of people, it's also a set of structures. It's almost like a machine made of men and women. Think of an assembly line. If you just took a bunch of people and threw them in a warehouse with a bunch of car parts and a manual, it'd probably be a disaster. Instead, a careful structure has been built: car parts roll down on a conveyor belt, each worker does one step of the process, everything is carefully designed and routinized. Order out of chaos.

Fixing the Machine

And when the system isn't working, it doesn't make sense to just yell at the people in it?any more than you'd try to fix a machine by yelling at the gears. True, sometimes you have the wrong gears and need to replace them, but more often you're just using them in the wrong way. When there's a problem, you shouldn't get angry with the gears?you should fix the machine.

If you have goals in life, you're probably going to need some sort of organization. Even if it's an organization of just you, it's still helpful to think of it as a kind of machine. You don't need to do every part of the process yourself?you just need to set up the machine so that the right outcomes happen.

For example, let's say you want to build a treehouse in the backyard. You're great at sawing and hammering, but architecture is not your forte. You build and build, but the treehouses keep falling down. Sure, you can try to get better at architecture, develop a better design, but you can also step back, look at the machine as a whole, and decide to fire yourself as the architect. Instead, you find a friend who loves that sort of thing to design the treehouse for you and you stick to actually building it. After all, your goal was to build a treehouse whose design you like?does it really matter whether you're the one who actually designed it?2

Or let's say you really want to get in shape, but never remember to exercise. You can keep beating yourself up for your forgetfulness, or you can put a system in place. Maybe you have your roommate check to see that you exercise before you leave your house in the morning or you set a regular time to consistently go to the gym together. Life isn't a high school exam; you don't have to solve your problems on your own.

Fundamental Attribution Error

In 1967, Edward Jones and Victor Harris gathered a group of college students and asked them to judge another student's exam (the student was a fictional character, but let's call him Jim). The exam always had one question, asking Jim to write an essay on Fidel Castro "as if [he] were giving the opening statement in a debate." But what sort of essay Jim was supposed to write varied: some of them required Jim to write a defense of Castro, others required Jim to write a critique of Castro, the rest left the choice up to Jim. The kids in the experiment were asked to read Jim's essay and then were asked whether they thought Jim himself was pro- or anti-Castro.

Jones and Harris weren't expecting any shocking results here; their goal was just to show the obvious: that people would conclude Jim was pro-Castro when he voluntarily chose write to a pro-Castro essay, but not when he was forced to by the teacher. But what they found surprised them: even when the students could easily see the question required Jim to write a pro-Castro essay, they still rated Jim as significantly more pro-Castro. It seemed hard to believe. "Perhaps some of the subjects were inattentive and did not clearly understand the context," they suspected.

So they tried again. This time they explained the essay was written for a debate tournament, where the student had been randomly assigned to either the for or against side of the debate. They wrote it in big letters on the blackboard, just to make this perfectly clear. But again they got the same results?even more clearly this time. They still couldn't believe it. Maybe, they figured, students thought Jim's arguments were so compelling he must really believe them to be able to come up with them.

So they tried a third time?this time recording Jim on tape along with the experimenter giving him the arguments to use. Surely no one would think Jim came up with them on his own now. Again, the same striking results: students were persuaded Jim believed the arguments he said, even when they knew he had no choice in making them.3

This was an extreme case, but we make the same mistake all the time. We see a sloppily-parked car and we think "what a terrible driver," not "he must have been in a real hurry." Someone keeps bumping into you at a concert and you think "what a jerk," not "poor guy, people must keep bumping into him." A policeman beats up a protestor and we think "what an awful person," not "what terrible training." The mistake is so common that in 1977 Lee Ross decided to name it the "fundamental attribution error": we attribute people's behavior to their personality, not their situation.4

Changing the Situation

Our natural reaction when someone screws up is to get mad at them. This is what happened at the old GM plant: workers would make a mistake and management would yell and scream. If asked to explain the yelling, they'd probably say that since people don't like getting yelled at, it'd teach them be more careful next time.

But this explanation doesn't really add up. Do you think the workers liked screwing up? Do you think they enjoyed making crappy cars? Well, we don't have to speculate: we know the very same workers, when given the chance to do good work, took pride in it and started actually enjoying their jobs.

They're just like you, when you're trying to exercise but failing. Would it have helped to have your friend just yell and scream at you for being such a lazy loser? Probably not?it probably would have just made you feel worse. What worked wasn't yelling, but changing the system around you so that it was easier to do what you already wanted to do.

The same is true for other people. Chances are, they don't want to annoy you, they don't like screwing up. So what's going to work isn't yelling at them, but figuring out how to change the situation. Sometimes that means changing how you behave. Sometimes that means bringing another person into the mix. And sometimes it just means simple stuff, like changing the way things are laid out or putting up reminders.

At the old GM plant, in Fremont, workers were constantly screwing things up: "cars with engines put in backwards, cars without steering wheels or brakes. Some were so messed up they wouldn't start, and had to be towed off the line." Management would yell at the workers, but what could you do? Things were moving so fast. "A car a minute don't seem like it's moving that fast," noted one worker, "but when you don't get it, you're in the hole. There's nobody to pull you out at General Motors, so you're going to let something go."

At the Toyota plant, they didn't just let things go. There was a red cord running above the assembly line, known as an andon cord, and if you ever found yourself in the hole, all you had to do was pull it, and the whole line would stop. Management would come over and ask you how they could help, if there was a way they could fix the problem. And they'd actually listen?and do it!

You saw the results all over the factory: mats and cushions for the workers to kneel on; hanging shelves traveling along with the cars, carrying parts; special tools invented specifically to solve problems the workers had identified. Those little things added up to make a big difference.

When you're upset with someone, all you want to do is change the way they're acting. But you can't control what's inside a person's head. Yelling at them isn't going to make them come around, it's just going to make them more defiant, like the GM workers who keyed the cars they made.

No, you can't force other people to change. You can, however, change just about everything else. And usually, that's enough.

1. This story has been told several places, but the quotes here are from Frank Langfitt with Brian Reed, "NUMMI," This American Life 403 (26 March 2010; visited 2012-09-23). Quotes are taken from the show's transcript which sometimes differ slightly from the aired version.

2. Some of the concepts and terms here were inspired by Ray Dalio, Principles (2001), part 2 (visited 2012-09-01).

3. Edward E. Jones and Victor A. Harris, "The Attribution of Attitudes," Journal of Experimental Social Psychology 3:1 (January 1967), 1?24.

4. Lee Ross, "The Intuitive Psychologist and His Shortcomings: Distortions in the Attribution Process," Advances in Experimental Social Psychology 10 (1977), 173?220.

Fix the Machine, Not the Person | Raw Thought


Aaron Swartz is the founder and director of Demand Progress, a nonprofit political action group with over a million members. He is also a Contributing Editor to The Baffler. Follow him on Twitter @aaronsw.

This post is part of the Raw Nerve series. To have the next one emailed to you, sign up using the form at the end of the post.

Image remixed from HuHu (Shutterstock).

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Dunkin' Donuts to begin using cage free eggs

Dunkin' Donuts says it will start using cage-free eggs in its breakfast sandwiches and eliminate "gestation crates" from its pork supply chain.

The Canton, Mass.-based company said Wednesday that it will transition 5 percent of its eggs to cage-free by the end of next year; it did not set a timeline for completing the switch.

To determine a timeline for eliminating gestation crates, or breeding cages for pigs, the company said it will start by requiring its U.S. pork suppliers to outline their plans to achieve that goal.

Josh Balk, director of corporate policy at the Humane Society of the United States, said that's the first step for most companies that want to stop the use of gestation crates.

"There's been a massive trend by the largest pork buyers to demand their suppliers eliminate gestation crates," he noted.

Other major fast-food chains that have committed to eliminating use of pig crates include McDonald's Corp., Burger King Worldwide Inc., Wendy's and Subway, as well as several supermarket chains such as Kroger Co. and Safeway Inc.

Gestation crates often confine mother pigs for their entire lives, or about four years, Balk said. The space is usually so small that pigs can barely move.

"For as long as students go to high school, these pigs can't even turn around," he said.

Several companies have also said they will start using cage-free eggs, although the commitment levels vary.

Egg and pork producers have argued that easing confinement standards for animals raises production costs, making their businesses less competitive.

By The Associated Press

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? 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://bottomline.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/09/26/14112317-dunkin-donuts-to-begin-using-cage-free-eggs?lite

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Daytrading, Stock Trading, Investing and Forex Trading ? The Key ...

These are programs which reference past market information when investigating realtime market info, taking the whole breadth of the market into account, to take advantage of the market?s pattern-esque movements and get an exceptionally good read and prophecy on where the market will go next so you can trade sensibly without needing to spend the effort or time doing so yourself. During the past, stocks pick programs were reserved for and only utilised by trading pros with massive firms.

First, a refund guarantee goes a good way in this niche. Stocks pick software has helped a considerable number of traders make big money on some hot choices, but because it's been so worthwhile for so many traders this has led a considerable number of publishers to piece together ineffectual pickers of their own and pass them off as cash earners with interesting branding and internet sites. Refusing to endure and correctly handle trades that do not work leads to trading gaffes. It's the incapacity to deal with the inescapable losing trade that causes traders to chop winning trades short, move stops in the middle of a trade, cling to losing trades, average down, and fail to click on the trigger on sound trade setups. Learning how to accept and handle trading loss could be of the same importance as making good trades. Survival Tips Here are 7 steps to survive and even flourish when suffering a loss : Put down the trade as it happened : Don?t sweep the loss under the rug! Include how you viewed the market at the time and the way in which the market action and your signals seemed to meet the standards for a sound trade set up. Judge the trade : Once the trading day is over, return to what you wrote and see what can be learned.

It's a wrong idea as day traders shouldn't only understand completely the logic trading but they also have to have a clear and calm attitude to make imperative call. Perhaps you are thinking about those day traders are just too fortunate to make some random profit in market. Almost all of the decisions get made in an exceedingly brief time period , thus, either a vet day trader or those depend on the help of trading methodology ought to have a clear mind and powerful heart to do that. Some of the systems can overlook and monitor the stockmarket, or select the best pick of stock for trader . You may either select the systems to frequently update the new stock statistical data, or use the ones that can investigate and prompt you the bullish stock pick or which is going to plunge. There'll be moments when you believe there is an excellent chance to make a trade only to realise that you are heading towards a problem.

The key here is to think first prior to jumping in. You have got to look at the situation rigorously before deciding for the very next step. The only possible way to be successful in the exchange so far as day-trading is anxious is, to make predictions about the stock patterns and attempt to make a capital on the short term market upturn. * Playing stories ? this plan of action is to buy stock in a company that has just reported good news * Range Trading ? here's where stock which has been rising and falling is acquired close to the low price and sold as it hits the heavy price range. Tips for surviving and prospering as a trader The 5 commonest methods adopted by day traders who try to make are profit are * Trend following ? utilized by all trading firms this tactic presupposes that stocks that having been increasing constantly may continue to rise. * Covering spreads ? To play the spread or the make the spread basically means to buy stock at the Bid price and sell the stock at the Ask cost. The biggest difference between the bid price and the ask price is sometimes known as the spread.

Source: http://traders101.com/2012/09/25/the-key-here-is-to-think-first-prior-to-jumping-right-in/

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Wednesday, September 26, 2012

A Product Spokesman is a Mandatory Role for the Debut of New ...

Enterprise IT ISVs in need of a method of rapidly building market awareness of new products should carefully consider designating a product spokesperson. This product spokesperson should be charged with promoting new products through a variety of media, including:

  • Print, Direct Mail
  • Online Web Sites
  • Social Media
  • Conferences
  • Customer Events, etc

Where an ISV is long on technology, but lacking as regards an understanding of marketing, the need to take this leadership step for a product may elude senior management. Missing this opportunity to designate product leadership often results in a much slower ? and more challenging ? product launch. After all, someone needs to take charge to ensure that a distinct, and consistent message is delivered to markets. Further, this individual needs to create the position papers, white papers, and other high level collateral that is required to create a stir (meaning interest) around a product. Of course, interest will, inevitably, result in engagement with prospects, perhaps in the form of incoming inquiries, or, perhaps in the form of attendance at seminars and other product presentation venues.

Where it is not possible to dedicate head count entirely to this set of tasks, then the tasks can certainly be split among a number of senior managers. However, any/all public announcements, presentations, communications, must be handled uniformly and in one consistent voice. In fact, availing of a third party communications firm can generally suffice to ensure that a product launch proceeds entirely along these lines. Answers to important questions can be fielded from engineering, finance, senior management, etc.; however the position piece that includes these answers must be crafted by a single writer who either establishes the market message, or adds to it, as required. Opting for many different voices speaking to the same topics ought to be entirely avoided as the end result of this type of babble is market confusion and ambiguity ? two conditions that ought to be avoided at almost any cost.

Once product leadership has been designated, then the management team should shift its scrutiny to proofing a communications plan for a product to ensure that every appropriate medium is served with a ?right? message. Partners, collaborators and influential individuals should be informed of the product and included in the review process to ensure that a best effort has been made.

If your business is set to launch a product, but you lack the internal resources to shoulder the marketing communications burden that will have to ensue, then you ought to secure the services of a third party to work with you as you traverse this phase of product development.

IMB Enterprises, Inc. has the resources to successfully execute on this type of requirement. Please contact us to learn further. You can call Ira Michael Blonder at +1 631-673-2929 to further a discussion about our services plan. You may also email Ira at imblonder@imbenterprises.com.

? IMB Enterprises, Inc. & Ira Michael Blonder, 2012 All Rights Reserved

Source: http://www.imbenterprises.com/product-marketing/a-product-spokesman-is-a-mandatory-role-for-the-debut-of-new-enterprise-it-software/

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MSI makes AMD-laden GX60 gaming laptop official with A10 heart ...

MSI launches GX60 allAMD gaming laptop with A10 processor, Radeon HD 7970M graphics

We can't say that there's a huge cross-section of buyers who want a gaming laptop but refuse to touch Intel components. Whatever the size, MSI likely has that group sewn up with the official unveiling of the GX60 following a stealth appearance at Computex. The 15.6-inch portable is built as showcase for AMD's latest mobile technology: it revolves around a 2.3GHz, quad-core A10-4600M processor using the Piledriver architecture as well as a Radeon HD 7970M to feed its 1080p screen at full speed. Thankfully, the PC is more than just a marketing vehicle and carries some of the gamer-tuned parts that we've seen in other MSI rigs, such as dual SSDs in a RAID stripe, a low-lag Killer networking chipset and a heavy-duty SteelSeries keyboard. Buying a GX60 may prove to be the real obstacle -- in keeping with most MSI introductions, there's no mention of a price or ship date, and none of the usual suspects have it in stock as of this writing.

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/09/25/msi-makes-gx60-all-amd-gaming-laptop-official/

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Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Walkable neighborhoods tied to lower diabetes risk

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - People living in communities that lend themselves to walking had a significantly lower risk of developing diabetes than those living in the least walkable neighborhoods in a large new study from Canada.

"If you have fewer opportunities for physical activity in your daily life, then you may gain more weight...and you're also more likely to develop diabetes," said Dr. Gillian Booth, the lead author and a researcher at St. Michael's Hospital in Toronto.

Booth said earlier studies have looked at potential links between diabetes and the pedestrian-friendliness of neighborhoods, and have found similar connections - but that research took only a snapshot in time, making it difficult to determine which came first, the neighborhood style or the elevated diabetes risk.

With the world's population increasingly concentrated in cities, Booth and her colleagues wanted to further tease apart the relationship between urban environment and health.

New immigrants from less developed countries to urban areas like Toronto are at particular risk for falling into a sedentary lifestyle and falling prey to Western lifestyle diseases, Booth's team notes in the journal Diabetes Care.

To assess whether neighborhood walkability influences the likelihood of developing diabetes, Booth and her colleagues collected information from a health registry on nearly all adults living in Ontario, focusing on the 1.2 million who did not have diabetes.

For five years, from 2005 to 2010, they tracked how many people went on to develop diabetes.

They also mapped out where the people lived, and categorized them according to the walkability of their community.

The most walking-friendly places are more densely populated, have streets that connect with one another, and have stores, schools, work places and other destinations within walking distance of homes.

The least walkable neighborhoods are more sprawling, with disjointed streets and long distances from homes to shopping centers and schools.

The researchers found that, among long-term Ontario residents, 6,003 out of about 210,000 of those who lived in the least walkable neighborhoods developed diabetes, compared to 5,290 out of 245,000 who lived in the most walkable areas. This corresponds to a 32 percent increase in diabetes risk for those who live in the least-walkable areas.

Among new immigrants to the region in the previous 10 years - most foreign born - more than twice as many people in the least-walkable neighborhoods developed diabetes as in the most-walkable areas, translating to a 58 percent increased relative risk for those in the walking-unfriendly neighborhoods.

The study did not show that people actually walked less in those neighborhoods, but Dr. Ethan Berke, associate professor at the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth in Hanover, New Hampshire, said that people who live in pedestrian-friendly communities tend to be more physically active.

Although the new study could not prove that walking was responsible for the lower diabetes risk in certain neighborhoods, Berke, who was not involved in the research, thinks that something in the neighborhood environment is likely responsible for the findings.

"Whether that's due to social capital or opportunities for healthy behaviors, such as physical activity, or opportunities for access to healthy foods isn't clear, because a walkable neighborhood is usually associated with a lot of those things," Berke said.

Other research has linked walking to a lowered chance of having diabetes. One recent study showed that people who are at high risk for diabetes and who walk more are less likely to ultimately develop the blood sugar disorder (see Reuters Health story of June 28, 2012).

Booth said that aside from the weight benefits of physical activity, exercise itself might help ward off diabetes by improving the body's use of insulin.

On the higher risk seen among recent immigrants to Canada, Booth speculates that immigrants from a very different environment may be more sensitive to the lack of opportunities for activity than residents who have lived in an area longer.

"We need to rethink how we're designing neighborhoods and think about it from the perspective of what impact it has on health," she said.

Berke agreed. "Where we live has a huge impact on our health, and I think this study adds to the evidence that where you live matters an awful lot in how you get sick and if you get sick," he said.

SOURCE: http://bit.ly/Qsw1xK Diabetes Care, online September 17, 2012.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/walkable-neighborhoods-tied-lower-diabetes-risk-194726208.html

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Google updates Chrome app for iOS 6, makes it friendly with the iPhone 5

Google updates Chrome app for iOS 6, makes it friendly with the iPhone 5

Over the next few weeks, we can surely expect iOS developers from all over the globe to start pushing out updates to make their applications better interact with Apple's iOS 6 and that all-new screen found on the iPhone 5. And, because we know some of you choose Chrome over Cupertino's built-in Safari browser, we thought we'd single out the fact that Google has outed a new version of the app which makes it friendly with the new iPhone's larger display as well as the most recent variant of iOS. Aside from the iPhone 5 / iOS 6 compatibility, though, Mountain View also bundled in some undisclosed stability and security improvements in version 21.0.1180.82 (!) of the web browsing application. As is usually the case, you'll find the updated Chrome goods in the App Store -- link for that is just down below.

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Google updates Chrome app for iOS 6, makes it friendly with the iPhone 5 originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 24 Sep 2012 16:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/09/24/google-chrome-app-for-ios-6-iphone-5/

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Jordy Smith and Adriano de Souza qualify for the quarter-finals at ...

Jordy Smith and Adriano de Souza qualify for the quarter-finals at 2012 Hurley Pro

South Africa?s Jordy Smith and Brazil?s Adriano de Souza made it through into the quarter-finals at the 2012 Hurley Pro, the sixth of ten stops on the 2012 Association of Surfing Professionals (ASP) World Championship Tour, after clinching top honours in their respective Round 5 heats that went down at Lower Trestles in California, America, on Thursday, September 20.

Smith comfortably got the better of Australia?s Josh Kerr in the third heat, allowing him to advance to the next stage of the competition while sending his rival packing.

The fourth heat saw Brazil?s Gabriel Medina getting stunned by an outstanding performance by De Souza, getting eliminated from the event as a result while allowing the latter to confidently make his way through into the quarter-finals.

The clean three-to-four foot waves breaking at the primary event site presented a perfect canvas for the elite ASP surfers to put their exciting surfing prowess on display, promising to provide plenty of entertainment for the huge crowd in attendance at Lower Trestles.

After failing to get their hands on a desirable result during their Round 4 heats, both Smith and Kerr found themselves facing-off in the third heat of Round 5, with the pressure of elimination hanging over their heads.

As the battle got underway, Smith got off to a decent start and went on to assert his authority over his rival with an impressive 8.43-point ride. He soon locked his second business-wave and unleashed a series of exciting tricks to earn a 7.50 for the effort, thus reaching a heat-total of 15.93 points.

Kerr appeared pretty rusty throughout the course of the heat and only managed to get to a heat-total of 9.57 points after collecting a couple of scores in the four-point range, thus tasting defeat.

The fourth heat turned out to be a Brazilian affair, with two of the most exciting talents from the region taking each other on in a battle for survival.

Medina drew first blood with a pretty ordinary 4.67-point ride and went on to back it up with a 4.90-point wave, reaching a heat-total of 9.57 points as a result.

De Souza, however, was nothing short of spectacular, looking as good as ever while navigating his way through the waves to lock the juiciest opportunities on offer. Earning a 9.30 off his first business-wave and going on to back it up with a 9.00-point ride, the Brazilian powerhouse finishing with a heat-total of 18.30 points, clinching a comfortable win as a result.

Source: http://blogs.bettor.com/Jordy-Smith-and-Adriano-de-Souza-qualify-for-the-quarter-finals-at-2012-Hurley-Pro-a189802

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Pats President: Welker integral part of team

Patriots president Jonathan Kraft said he is hopeful that wide receiver Wes Welker finishes his career as a Patriot during an interview on 98.5 The Sports Hub in Boston prior to the team's Sunday night game against the Baltimore Ravens.

Kraft also stressed that Welker, who the team attempted to sign to a long-term extension this offseason, remains an integral part of the team's offense.

"I know there's been a lot of chatter about Wes this week, and Wes is an important of the team, and Wes is somebody that we tried this offseason to sign long term, and we just weren't able to get there. That's not a function of either side doing something wrong, I think it's just a matter of, when you sit down at a negotiating table and two sides have a perception about what's right, and you get close, and you just can't get all the way there. And that's what the situation was with Wes. I'm hopeful that Wes will finish his career a New England Patriot."

The chatter Kraft referred to has centered around Welker's relative lack of playing time season (close to 73 percent of the offensive snaps) in comparison to a year ago (89 percent). Kraft posited that this is due in part to the presence of an outside receiver that the team largely lacked in 2011.

"I know there's a lot of talk about his play time, and one of the guys on our staff came up with an interesting statistic, which is, Wes before last year, in the year in which we really didn't have a full-time outside guy like a [Randy] Moss or like we have with Brandon Lloyd, Wes, in the games from 2007-2010 that he had played in, averaged 73 percent. So far this season, he's averaging 72 percent play time. I'm sure, if there really is a dramatic difference, I think a lot of it has to do with the personnel that are available. And I think anybody that assumes Wes Welker isn't an integral part of this team and isn't somebody that -- we love having him a part of it, I think they're making a bad assumption."

Source: http://espn.go.com/blog/boston/new-england-patriots/post/_/id/4730598/pats-president-welker-integral-part-of-team

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U.S. says complied with WTO ruling on Boeing subsidies

GENEVA (Reuters) - The United States said on Monday it had complied with a ruling ordering it to withdraw unfair subsidies to Boeing as tit-for-tat exchanges flared up in the world's largest trade dispute.

The World Trade Organization (WTO) found in March that the U.S. planemaker had received billions of dollars in unfair aid, following an earlier ruling against European support to Airbus.

The United States and the European Union (EU) cannot agree on the severity of the ruling against subsidies to Airbus, which the United States says far outstrip any U.S. government support for Boeing .

The U.S. Trade Representative's office said it had met a September 23 deadline to comply with the WTO's findings in a case brought by the European Union in response to the first claim launched by the United States more than seven years ago.

"USTR has been working extensively over the last six months with all of the government entities affected by the March 23, 2012 ruling in this case - including NASA, the Department of Defense, the State of Washington, and the City of Wichita - to ensure full compliance with the United States' WTO obligations," the government agency said in a statement.

The EU's executive Commission, in response, said it needed to check that the U.S. had taken the necessary action to end the subsidies.

"In March this year, the WTO ruled that billions of dollars of subsidies to Boeing were illegal, and the U.S. were given until today to bring those to an end. We will now immediately review their compliance package to check whether the U.S. have taken the necessary steps to end these subsidies and their adverse effects," EU Trade spokesperson John Clancy said in a statement.

The United States has targeted government loans to Airbus, which it says helped the European planemaker compete unfairly to replace Boeing as the world's largest commercial jetmaker.

The European Union says Boeing is unfairly assisted by government research deals and other federal and local measures.

Both sides now claim to have complied with the respective WTO rulings, while the United States has accused the EU of failing to fall into step with the WTO decisions and is threatening up to $10 billion in sanctions.

Boeing said Airbus and its government backers had "thumbed their noses" at the WTO. Airbus is owned by EADS , in which the French government has a stake and the German government has influence via a stake held by Daimler .

"Despite a crystal clear ruling against launch aid subsidies, European governments have continued the practice by providing Airbus with billions of taxpayer euros and pounds for its next new product, the A350," Boeing said in a statement.

"What is more, the European governments have yet to remove the very substantial subsidies, including those propping up the A380, which the WTO's ruling in June of last year requires them to do."

After a legal battle that dates back seven years, most observers expect the United States and the European Union will eventually negotiate a settlement to end the row, but warn it could rumble on for years more amid further bickering.

EADS, is now in merger talks with British arms maker BAE Systems Plc , a tie-up that would create the world's largest integrated defense and commercial aviation company, with estimated sales of $92.4 billion, surpassing Boeing's by more than a third, based on 2011 figures.

(Reporting by Tom Miles; Editing by Susan Fenton)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-says-complied-wto-ruling-boeing-subsidies-094244086--finance.html

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Ivory Coast reopens air space with Ghana

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Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Summer daze has Big Ten looking out of it

Fall is still more than a week away and the Big Ten is already down to one team with a realistic chance of playing for the national championship.

No pressure Michigan State.

The conference is coming off a 6-6 weekend that left it with only three ranked teams and plenty of reasons for concern.

In the Leaders Division, the NCAA eliminated No. 12 Ohio State and Penn State from Big Ten title game contention before the season even started.

Now favored Wisconsin is searching for its offense after a startling 10-7 loss to Oregon State on Saturday, and neither Illinois nor Purdue has done anything to suggest they will be more than, well, Illinois and Purdue.

As for Indiana, 2-0 looks great until you see it was against Indiana State and Massachusetts.

Over in the Legends, Nebraska needs to fix its defense, Michigan's D also has shown holes and Iowa's offense has been worse than Wisconsin's.

Then again, at least the Hawkeyes haven't fired anybody ? yet.

Wisconsin coach Brett Bielema did that on Sunday, letting go Mike Markuson, who was in his first season on the Badgers' staff.

"Panic is for the outside world," Bielema told reporters in Madison, Wis., on Monday. "Reality is what I live with."

Of course, firing a coach two weeks into the season does nothing to ease the fears of jumpy Wisconsin fans who have become accustomed to watching the Badgers bulldoze opponents on their way to the Rose Bowl the past two seasons. Wisconsin managed 35 yards rushing against the Beavers.

But, yes, Bielema is right. It's too soon for Badgers fans to panic. A third straight Rose Bowl is still in reach.

It is not too early, however, to wonder aloud if the Big Ten is headed toward a limp league race and a season of national irrelevance.

Ohio State's first season under Urban Meyer is off to a 2-0 start and quarterback Braxton Miller is already blossoming into one of the most dynamic players in the country. But the Buckeyes are playing only for pride as they serve their one-year NCAA bowl ban. Anything less than a perfect season makes the Buckeyes a sidebar until next season.

Penn State is also NCAA-banned from the postseason, though it doesn't look as if that will matter. The Nittany Lions are 0-2 and staring at a difficult first season under coach Bill O'Brien.

Wisconsin only needs to be better than Illinois, Purdue and Indiana to earn a second straight trip to the Big Ten championship game in Indianapolis. The Badgers will try to get healthy Saturday against Utah State (2-0). No gimme considering the Aggies are coming off a victory against Utah.

Michigan and Nebraska were expected to challenge No. 10 Michigan State for the Legends title. That could still happen, but both traditional powers are looking defenseless.

Brady Hoke's Wolverines have allowed 522 yards rushing in a humbling loss to Alabama and a 31-25 win against Air Force.

"... I think we got a long way to go," Hoke said Monday of his rebuilt defensive line.

Right below Michigan in the Big Ten's defensive rankings sits Nebraska. The Cornhuskers have allowed 529 yards rushing, and the 653 total yards they gave up in a 36-30 loss to UCLA was the second-most Nebraska has ever allowed in a game.

"I've been sick to my stomach since that game," coach Bo Pelini said.

If the Spartans lose to No. 20 Notre Dame on Saturday, Big Ten Commissioner Jim Delany might be feeling a bit queasy, too.

___

HEISMAN WATCH

Heisman Trophy contenders come and go in September. Remember Tate Forcier's first few games at Michigan?

UCLA tailback Johnathan Franklin is a player worth keeping an eye on. The senior leads the nation in rushing with 431 yards after ripping through Nebraska for 217. He is averaging 10.5 yards per carry for the No. 22 Bruins.

Franklin has been a good player on a mediocre team the past couple of seasons. He ran for 976 yards and 5.9 per carry last season, as the Bruins unraveled in coach Rick Neuheisel's last season. In 2010, he ran for 1,127 yards, 5.3 per carry and eight touchdowns.

With redshirt freshman Brett Hundley providing new coach Jim Mora the best looking quarterback UCLA has had since Cade McNown, defenses won't be able to stack up against Franklin and the Bruins could win enough games to keep the tailback in the Heisman conversation all season.

___

EDSALL BOWL

Maryland coach Randy Edsall faces his old team for the first time, when Connecticut visits the Terps on Saturday.

Edsall wasn't exactly Nick Saban at Storrs, 74-70 in 11 seasons, but he won over most Huskies fans by generally maxing out his teams' potential. They figured that one day Edsall would leave for a better job ... but Maryland? And just hours after the Huskies had lost the Fiesta Bowl to Oklahoma.

Fair to say there were some hurt feelings.

"It is not going to be hard to get fired up for that one, definitely. That is about it; that is all I am going to say about that," UConn defensive tackle Ryan Wirth told the Middletown (Conn.) Press after a 10-7 loss at home to North Carolina State.

The Terps already have matched last season's win total with close with victories against William & Mary and Temple. Though Edsall has a long way to go to convince the many skeptics in College Park.

___

QUICK HITS

? No. 14 Texas visits Mississippi, off to a 2-0 start under new coach Hugh Freeze. Not much was expected of the Rebels, but a 28-10 victory against UTEP has Ole Miss fans pumped to welcome the Longhorns to Oxford. Texas hasn't played a Southeastern Conference team other than Arkansas in the regular season since 1992. Ole Miss hasn't hosted a nonconference opponent from another BCS automatic-qualifying conference since 2008.

? Colorado fans have to be hoping this is rock bottom after losses to rival Colorado State and Sacramento State to open the season.

? Really big game in the Big East on Thursday with Rutgers (2-0) visiting South Florida (2-0). Both teams are coming off a short week, but all short weeks are not created equal. The Scarlet Knights shut out Howard at home on Saturday. The Bulls came from 11 down in the fourth quarter to win at Nevada, and then got home at 4 a.m. Sunday. USF coach Skip Holtz said Monday he had a "tired" team.

___

LAST WORD

"We still believe in John L., 100 percent." Arkansas tight end Chris Gragg said about coach John L. Smith. Razorbacks fans aren't quite as confident after a loss to Louisiana-Monroe, especially with No. 1 Alabama coming to Fayetteville on Saturday.

____

AP Sports Writers Eric Olson in Lincoln, Neb., and Kurt Voigt in Fayetteville, Ark., contributed.

____

Follow Ralph D. Russo at www.Twitter.com/ralphdrussoap

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/summer-daze-big-ten-looking-081815823--spt.html

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