Friday, October 25, 2013

Autopsy: 13-year-old with pellet gun shot 7 times


SANTA ROSA, Calif. (AP) — An autopsy report shows the 13-year-old boy who was killed by a Northern California sheriff's deputy while holding a pellet gun was shot seven times.

The preliminary report from the Sonoma County coroner's office says the two fatal wounds hit Andy Lopez in his right hip and the right side of his chest.

Investigators believe the deputies who encountered the boy Tuesday afternoon fired eight rounds. The timeline released by Santa Rosa police says those shots were fired within 10 seconds of the deputies' first report of a suspicious person.

The deputies say the teen was carrying what looked like an assault rifle and had his back toward them at first. They ordered him to drop the weapon, but instead he turned toward them.

Only after the shooting did they realize that he was carrying a pellet gun that looked like an AK-47.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/autopsy-13-old-pellet-gun-shot-7-times-022307393.html
Category: Jeff Soffer   Wojciech Braszczok   eddie aikau   iTunes Radio   the league  

First Look: Aziz Ansari Talks About The Insanity Of Marriage In His Upcoming Netflix Comedy Special







'I wanna keep doing that... 'till you're dead.'






Fans of the lovable, huggable Aziz Ansari should start mentally preparing themselves for November 1 because it’s going down! The stand up comedian who tells the absolute best Kanye West and R. Kelly jokes in the history of Kanye West and R. Kelly jokes has a new standup special coming to Netflix. Today we get our first look at Buried Alive and I can’t wait! Aziz explains marriage, from a very creepy, slightly morbid perspective and it’s awesome. Peep the video for more!


[Source]



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‘No Scrubs,’ ‘Waterfalls,’ And 5 Other Reasons To Watch (And Re-Watch) That VH1 TLC Biopic



Yesterday Trent offered a mini-review of the TLC biopic that aired on VH1 earlier this week, and I think I loved it as much as he did. Crazy, Sexy, Cool: The TLC Story was sooo much fun. I was fully prepared to be unimpressed with the movie, but they totally proved me wrong. I think I was worried that the film would rely too heavily on the fact that we all still loooove all those songs (Creep, Waterfalls, etc.) and there wouldn’t be much meat to the story. But I was wrong– it was very good stuff and, like Trent, I highly recommend it. I have to admit, there were a few times when it got a little too made-for-TV-biopic-y on me, but overall the performances were good and, obviously, the music was amazing. If you watched it, I’m sure you had a blast and I thought it would be a good idea to keep the party going. Click inside to relive and re-lurve the best of TLC‘s epic CrazySexyCool album!


7 Reasons To Watch (And Re-Watch) That VH1 TLC Biopic




 

1. No Scrubs





 

In the biopic we find out the origin of the super-fly, super futuristic look in this video. I won’t spoil it for those of you who haven’t watched yet, but it’s a great story. All the other songs on this list are from the CrazySexyCool album, but this one (from Fanmail) was sooo much more than a song when it first dropped– it was a friggen movement! Like seriously, the No Scrubs movement left a lotta dudes with hurt feelings (shouts out to the Sporty Theives), LOL. So yeah, I kinda had to include it.


2. Waterfalls





 

True story: when this song dropped I listened to it 72,000 times until I knew all the words to Left-Eye‘s verse (this was before the days of Rap Genius); I wrote those words down and– line by line– read them to my mother while she was cooking so she could help me understand every single lyric. AKA I’ve wanted to be a Hip-Hop theorist since I was 10. Anyway, if this track doesn’t still bring you chills then you are DEAD inside! DEAD! Friggen Waterfalls.


P.S. OMG, I had an EPIC crush on Shyheim– the drug dealer at the beginning of the video. With his little sexy ass.


3. Creep





 

Y’all have to see the movie! Whooo! The part where [SPOILER ALERT! SPOILER ALERT!] Chilli‘s recording this in the booth staring dead at Dallas‘s cheating ass?! Whooo! Keke Palmer did alright, man. Loved it.


Also, why do I still not own a pair of red silk pajamas? #FAIL


4. Diggin On You





 

I don’t know what it is about this song, but when I hear it I just want NOBODY TO TALK TO ME. It’s probably that thing where they just don’t make music like this anymore. Le sigh. The nostalgia’s settin’ in hardcore over here.


5. Sumthin Wicked This Way Comes





 

A lot of people forget that CrazySexyCool was so dope partly because of the subtle Hip-Hop features. Busta Rhymes did an Interlude on the album, and this song was my first introduction to the genius that is AndrĂ© 3000. Loved his verse, loved the whole song, and I’m currently losing my mind to Left-Eye‘s verse. She was seriously, for serious the truth!


6. If I Was Your Girlfriend





 

Yassssss Gawd!


That is all.


7. Red Light Special





 

Friends. Please feel free to envision me at age 10, braids in my hair, a little bit on the chubs side, crooning my heart out to this in front of my bedroom mirror, and fully believing in my own sexual prowess as a 5th grader. Go ahead. And picture that girl belting out Chilli‘s part:



I’m a woman! A real woman!
I know just what I want,
I know just who I aaaaaaaaaaaaaam!



LMAO: you’re welcome.


I know there are soooo mny other TLC songs to rock out to, but please understand that I have a gorgeous newborn baby next to me who is currently over the Boppy Pillow. Definitely mention your fave tracks in the comments and I’ll throw in a link! I may or may not be about to watch that movie again… Seriously. It was that much fun.


Am currently singing Red Light Special to my newborn. He’s into it.



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/pinkisthenewblog/~3/c9SAj2B9KMs/no-scrubs-waterfalls-and-5-other-reasons-to-watch-and-re-watch-that-vh1-tlc-biopic
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Thursday, October 24, 2013

Suddenly It's Microsoft, Not Google, That Apple Hates - Yahoo Finance



Apple (AAPL) CEO Tim Cook suddenly has a new target instead of Google for all his zingers – Microsoft (MSFT).


It seems Steve Ballmer’s final play to acquire Nokia’s (NOK) phone and tablet business is rankling the Cupertino gang. Since Google (GOOG) introduced Android to compete with the iPhone, most of Cook’s ire, and that from Steve Jobs before him, was aimed at the search giant. Apple’s old “I’m a Mac, I’m a PC” ads seemed like ancient history.


But that has all changed, as was clear from the start of Apple’s keynote event on Tuesday.


“They are confused,” Cook said of the competition he did not name. “They chased after netbooks. Now they are trying to make PCs into tablets and tablets into PCs. Who knows what they will do next?"


Unnamed but not unknown – the reference to Microsoft’s Surface tablets, which prominently feature Office software and keyboards, was clear. Apple even scheduled the keynote for the same day the second-generation Surface tablets went on sale, obliterating any free press Microsoft might get.


Free, free and free


And it wasn’t just talk. Apple announced that its new operating system upgrade for laptop and desktop computers, dubbed OS X Mavericks, would be offered free of charge to owners of the past three versions. Microsoft is charging $120 to $200 for its Windows 8.1 software upgrade, although current owners of Windows 8 can upgrade for free.


What about Apple’s so-called productivity suite, the word-processing program Pages, spreadsheet software Numbers and presentation maker Keynote? Free as well with new device purchases. Apple even put up a picture belittling Microsoft's $99 annual subscription fee to use mobile versions of its Office apps. "Others would have you pay a small fortune," Apple senior vice president Eddy Cue quipped, again without naming Microsoft.


Related: 3 Ways Apple Can Win Over Millennials Forever


Microsoft has long delayed bringing Office to Apple's platform, hoping that offering the suite exclusively on its own tablets might bolster sales. It offers Office apps for the iPhone (users rate the suite just 2 out of 5 stars) but still has not set a date for an iPad version.


Why the change in Apple's attitude? Before Microsoft agreed to acquire Nokia's devices business for $7.2 billion last month, the company wasn't a direct threat to Apple's core business. Apple's software largely complements its hardware, where it makes almost all its profits. But now that Microsoft is also making premium hardware devices, it's right in Apple's sights.


Even tech analysts got the message loud and clear.


Almost all Microsoft’s profits come from licensing fees on its Windows operating system and Office productivity software, notes Jan Dawson, chief telecoms analyst at Ovum.


“Apple is now teaching people to expect both of those things to be free,” Dawson wrote after the Apple event. “While this won't disrupt Microsoft's business overnight, it will create further pressure on Microsoft to bring down prices for its productivity software and especially for Windows.”


Tablet wars


The pricing strategy of Apple’s iPads also indicates the company is more focused on competing against Microsoft’s tablets, not cheaper competition from Google, Amazon (AMZN) and others.


Microsoft doesn’t compete in tablets with low prices. Its Surface Pro 2 actually costs a lot more than an iPad, starting at $900. It’s pitched as a laptop replacement that can also provide the entertainment apps of a tablet.


Apple introduced an upgraded iPad, called the iPad Air, but kept prices exactly the same, starting at $499. Amazon’s similar large-screened Kindle Fire HDX starts at $379.


And a new iPad mini with a better screen starts at $399, up from the previous model’s $329 price point. Amazon sells its smaller tablet at $229, as does Google. Sure, Apple kept around the previous model mini but, at $299, it's still priced well above the competition.


So in tablets, Apple is competing on features and usability, not price – just like Microsoft.


Apple’s new iPads also overwhelmed coverage of Nokia’s press conference earlier on Tuesday, in which it unveiled its first Windows tablet, the Lumia 2520.


Apple already has about a 170 million iPad head start on Microsoft and Nokia. Now Tim Cook is trying to drive the final stake in.


To keep up with all the latest tech industry news, follow Aaron Pressman on Twitter and Tumblr.


More from Breakout:


Martha Stewart's Retail Love Triangle Ends in Tears


Netflix Shares Plunge After Hitting Record High


Ben Stein on Obamacare's Republican Roots



Source: http://finance.yahoo.com/blogs/breakout/suddenly-microsoft-not-google-apple-hates-132745760.html
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Microsoft Surface 2 (32GB)


When the Microsoft Surface RT first came out, it was a very good product with a well-executed design and powerful productivity tools, but it was hard to recommend to all but the most ardent of early adopters. With the launch of the Microsoft Surface 2, it's like hearing the same song with the volume turned up. The new Surface 2 offers even better productivity tools, with improved keyboard accessories, a smoother Windows RT experience, and a wide selection of familiar tools, like Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and now Outlook. Throw in an elegant, improved design and dramatically better performance and battery life, and the Surface 2 reigns as the new Editors' Choice for Windows RT tablets.




Design

Microsoft has made several changes to the design first seen on the Microsoft Surface RT, but it has wisely decided not change what works. The tablet still has the slim slab design of the previous Surface products, complete with the lightweight VaporMag magnesium-alloy construction and angular beveled edges. This time around, however, the Surface 2 is a little bit thinner (0.35 inch) and a little bit lighter (1.42 pounds sans keyboard), and the stealthy black color is now a light silvery grey that's nearly white in certain light.






The display has also gotten an upgrade, from 1366-by-768 resolution to the full HD 1920-by-1080. Compared to the likes of the Apple iPad (4th Generation, Wi-Fi), with its high-resolution Retina Display, it pales in comparison. However, stacked against other Windows RT tablets, like the Asus Vivo Tab RT (with a 1366-by-768 display), it's a giant step up. Regardless, the display is much improved, both in resolution and color quality, and looks great whether reading documents in six-point font or watching HD movies on YouTube or Netflix. The capacitive touch display also tracks five points simultaneously, which is enough for one- or two-handed use.



Along the back of the Surface 2 tablet is a built in kickstand, which looks identical to the kickstand on the Surface RT. However, Microsoft's designers and engineers have upgraded this as well, changing the hinge to allow for two positions instead of one. The first position props the kickstand at the same 22-degree position seen on the previous iteration, which is perfect for use on a desk or table by a person of average height. The drawback to this, of course, is that if you were taller than average or wanted to use the tablet balanced on your lap rather than at table height, the angle doesn't quite work. Enter the two position hinge, which now opens further, to a much more comfortable 55 degrees, perfect for actual lap-top use and those of us over six feet tall.



Keyboard Cover

Microsoft has also updated the accompanying keyboard covers, which attach to the tablet along the bottom edge with a magnetic dock. The docking connector is one of the best things about the tablet in that it seems to always work, always connect correctly, and the magnetic connection holds strongly enough that it won't unintentionally slip, but pulls off easily without any sort of latch. While the TouchCover and TypeCover accessories are upgraded along with the tablets, the previously released keyboard covers are still compatible. One thing the keyboard covers don't offer is improved battery life. The Editors' Choice Dell XPS 10, like many hybrid tablets, comes with a docking keyboard that has a secondary battery, nearly doubling the usable life of the tablet when docked. The slim keyboard covers Microsoft offers for the Surface 2 do not.



The TypeCover that came with our review unit has been upgraded with a quieter key mechanism, which makes it a lot less irritating to your coworkers or fellow commuters, and a backlight that adds visibility in dim and dark environments. While we didn't have a new TouchCover keyboard to try during our testing, the soft touch sensitive keyboard is also upgraded with an improved array of sensors for more accurate typing.



Unfortunately, Microsoft hasn't fixed the biggest problem people had with the TypeCover and TouchCover keyboards, namely that they are not included in the price of the device. Instead, they are sold as accessories, with the TouchCover 2 ($119.99 list) and TypeCover 2 ($129.99 list) both purchased separately from the tablet. Given that you'll need a cover for any of the laptop-like capabilities touted on the Surface, this mostly seems like a sneaky way for Microsoft to squeeze an extra hundred bucks out of customers.





Software and Apps

Windows RT is also back, though you won't find the RT name on the Surface this time around. With the RT 8.1 update, many of the same changes seen on Windows 8.1 come to the tablet OS as well. The start button is back when in desktop mode, and the tiles of the start screen can now be resized and repositioned with greater flexibility.



The biggest change unique to the RT OS, however, is the disappearance of the desktop—or at least the navigation to it. While there isn't a lot you would need the desktop for in RT, because most software comes as apps from the Windows store, when it is wanted, there's no way to get there. The desktop tile, which is so integral to both Windows 8 and the original version of RT, is now gone, giving you no direct path from the start screen to the desktop.



The other major change is the included software. Office RT 2013 has been expanded to now include an RT-friendly version of Outlook in addition to the RT variants of Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and OneNote already included with the original Surface RT.



Other extras include 200GB of cloud storage via Microsoft SkyDrive, which both bolsters the 32GB of onboard storage and makes sharing and syncing files between the Surface 2 and other PCs easier. If you want to really integrate the Surface 2 into your circle of personal computing devices, SkyDrive is essential. Microsoft's offer only lasts for two years, however, after which you'll need to pay for the same amount of storage.



Microsoft also bundles in the Best of Skype package, which adds 1 -months of free international calling and free Wi-Fi through Skype Hotspots along with the normal Skype app. Whether or not this is a big draw has a lot to do with how frequently you use Skype to call landline phones or other countries (which many people do) and if you had any idea that Skype Hotspots are a thing, or whether there's one convenient to you.



Finally, there's the question of apps and software. While there are over 100,000 apps available that run on Windows RT—a vast improvement over the paltry 3,000 on offer when the Surface RT first launched—the selection still feels sparse and slightly out of date. There are plenty of unique offerings, with games like Halo: Spartan Assault, and the ubiquitous Angry Birds (in several different incarnations), and media apps like Netflix, HuluPlus, and the New York Times.



Compared to the 475,000 apps that Apple has for the iPad, and the fact that a great many of those apps appeared on iOS and Android devices long before coming to the Windows Store, even this sort of growth feels insufficient, and it's frustrating to go hunting for a hugely popular app, like Instagram or Seamless, only to find that there's no RT-friendly version.



Features

On the right-hand edge of the tablet is a single USB 3.0 port, along with a micro HDMI output and a microSD card slot. On the left, you'll find a headset jack and physical volume controls. All other connections are wireless, with dual-band 802.11n Wi-Fi and Bluetooth 4.0. The Surface 2 also includes the usual tablet sensors: Accelerometer, gyroscope, magnetometer, and ambient light detection through the onboard cameras.



The Surface 2 features a front facing 3.5 megapixel webcam. While I rarely devote much of my reviews to webcam quality, the front-facing camera is just about ideal for Skype, being selected and optimized by Microsoft just for that purpose, and it performed quite well, with clear images, and 720p video capture.



The rear-facing camera increases the resolution to 5 megapixels, and is set at a slight angle so as to offset the tilt of the tablet when using the kickstand. While this is great for shooting video when the tablet is stationary, you will need to hold the Surface 2 at an angle when using it handheld. And though this angle works great for the first kickstand position, it doesn't correct for the angle of the second 55-degree position on the kickstand. It's just another feature that manages to be both thoughtfully designed and frustrating at the same time.



The Surface 2 is available with either 32GB of internal storage ($449 list), as seen in our review unit, or 64GB ($549 list). Microsoft covers the Surface 2 with a one-year limited warranty.



Performance

The Surface 2 upgraded the tablet's hardware, featuring an Nvidia Tegra 4 quad-core processor, a 1.7GHz ARM mobile CPU paired with 2GB of RAM. It's a step up from the Nvidia Tegra 3 processor found in the Surface RT, and when we tested performance in BrowserMark 2.0, the Surface 2 left the previous Surface RT in the dust, offering a much faster browsing experience. Because of this processor, and the fact that Windows RT doesn't support traditional Windows software—including our normal batch of tests—we weren't able to run our usual Windows benchmark tests. Despite this, we were able to test web browsing performance and battery life, arguably the two most important aspects of the tablet.



While it has the same size 31.5Wh battery as the Surface RT, the Surface 2 stretches the available charge for several hours more, lasting 14 hours 51 minutes in our battery rundown test. By comparison, the leading Dell XPS 10 lasted 11:34, well ahead of the Asus Vivo Tab RT (9:37) and the Apple iPad (5:36). The previous Surface RT lasted only 7:45. However, both the Dell XPS 10 and the Asus Vivo Tab RT also offered a docking keyboard with a secondary battery, extending the life of the tablet to 20:36 and 15:00, respectively. Though the Surface 2—thanks to more efficient hardware—offers nearly as long battery life on its own, the addition of a secondary battery would extend it even further.



Conclusion

The Microsoft Surface 2's performance, the software, and the pricing are all of a caliber that—were this the public's first taste of Windows RT—it could do far better than the disappointing Surface RT did. Thanks to the Nvidia Tegra 4 processor, the 14+ hours of battery life, and the value offer of the lower price and expanded productivity, the Microsoft Surface 2 is the clear leader among Windows RT tablets, and thus our new Editors' Choice for that category. If you want Office and Skype on an affordable tablet—and don't require the full Windows experience—the Surface 2 is the best there is.


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/dCJnFfSKhfg/0,2817,2426263,00.asp
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Guy On Train Live Tweets Former NSA Chief's On-Background Interview



You'd think he'd be more careful: The man who was once responsible for the National Security Agency and the Central Intelligence Agency was giving a background interview during a train ride, but he didn't notice that a fellow passenger was live tweeting the highlights.


In truth, we didn't learn any secrets from Ret. Gen. Michael Hayden, but Tom Matzzie, who used to work for the liberal group MoveOn.org, provided a riveting — and funny — account of the ordeal on his Twitter feed.


Matzzie said Hayden told the journalists that he could only be identified as a former senior administration official and then went on to give "disparaging quotes about" the Obama administration. At one point Hayden, said Matzzie, was "bragging about rendition and black sites."


Hayden, you might remember, served as the NSA director under Bill Clinton and George W. Bush. He served as CIA Director for Bush and Obama.


As you might imagine, eventually Hayden got a call from his office telling him what was going on. Matzzie wondered if he should hide. But Hayden graciously offered an interview and even took a picture with Matzzie.


Eventually, Matzzie tweeted, Hayden got off the train in Newark.


"He touched my back... again," Matzzie tweeted, before adding that he was about to get off the train himself and someone should "email my wife and explain all this."


Micah Sifry, the co-founder of Personal Democracy Forum, Storified the entire thing:



Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/10/24/240587739/guy-on-train-live-tweets-former-nsa-chiefs-on-background-interview?ft=1&f=1001
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Johnny Knoxville Has 'So Much' More For 'Bad Grandpa .5'


'Jackass' tells MTV News all the crazy stuff that didn't make the final film.


By Kevin P. Sullivan, with reporting by Brandon Rae








Source:
http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1716094/johnny-knoxville-jackass-bad-grandpa-interview.jhtml

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