Sunday, October 27, 2013

Cardinals Get A Walk-Off World Series Win On Bizarre Play




Hear Tom Goldman's Report On 'Weekend Edition'






Home plate umpire Dana DeMuth points to third base, where an obstruction call awarded the St. Louis Cardinals' Allen Craig home plate — and the winning run in Game 3 of the World Series — Saturday night. Boston Red Sox catcher Jarrod Saltalamacchia and Koji Uehara were dismayed by the call.



Jamie Squire/Getty Images


Home plate umpire Dana DeMuth points to third base, where an obstruction call awarded the St. Louis Cardinals' Allen Craig home plate — and the winning run in Game 3 of the World Series — Saturday night. Boston Red Sox catcher Jarrod Saltalamacchia and Koji Uehara were dismayed by the call.


Jamie Squire/Getty Images


Game 3 of the World Series ended in unusual fashion Saturday night, as a ninth-inning obstruction call on Boston third baseman Will Middlebrooks resulted in umpires awarding a base to St. Louis' Allen Craig — bringing the winning run home and putting the Cardinals ahead in the series, 2-1.


It's reportedly the first time an obstruction call has ended a World Series game. And it brought an end to a nearly four-hour contest in which the Red Sox had twice rallied from two-run deficits — most recently in the eighth inning.


The game's final score was 5-4. Here's how the last half of the ninth unfolded at Busch Stadium:



  • With the hosting Cardinals batting last, the team was down to two outs when Yadier Molina singled. Allen Craig followed with a pinch-hit double off Boston closer Koji Uehara, sending the ball down the line into left field.

  • Boston drew its infielders in, to prevent a run — and that strategy seemed to pay off when St. Louis' Jon Jay grounded to a diving Dustin Pedroia at second base. Pedroia threw home, where catcher Jarrod Saltalamacchia easily tagged a sliding Molina for the second out.

  • Saltalamacchia then threw to third in an attempt to nab Craig — the team's cleanup hitter who returned from a foot injury to play in the World Series after missing the rest of the postseason.

  • The errant throw brought Middlebrooks across the bag toward second, with Craig behind him. The third baseman couldn't corral the ball, which seemed to nip Craig's shoulder before heading into foul territory near left field.

  • Craig popped up to make a dash for home — but he was tripped when a sprawling Middlebrooks raised his legs.

  • That drew an obstruction call from third base umpire Jim Joyce, meaning that the play at home, in which the sliding Craig would have been out, didn't matter. In fact, initial replays seemed to show that Craig never touched home plate.

  • At home plate, umpire Dana DeMuth signaled Craig safe, pointing to third base where the call had been made. Players from both teams converged on home plate in disbelief — the Red Sox displaying the angry variety and the Cardinals showing the happier sort.

During the commotion, Craig remained on the ground; he was eventually helped off the field. He was asked later when he knew he had scored a walk-off run in the World Series.


"Uh, when I saw my entire team running out on the field," he answered.


"I felt like I was running in slow motion," Craig said. "I was just trying to get home," he added. "I didn't have much in the tank."


After the game, the umpires spoke to the media — another unusual move that seemed required in this case, when a call decided the game's final play.


"Unfortunately for Middlebrooks, he was right there," Joyce said. "There was contact, and so he could not advance to home plate naturally."


"The umpires stressed the call was made regardless of intent," NPR's Tom Goldman reports. "Middlebrooks said afterwards there was nothing he could've done to get out of Craig's way."


"We have forced a couple of throws at third base that have proven costly," Red Sox manager John Farrell said. "Tonight was a costly throw."


As Tom notes, the other bad throw to third came in Game 2, allowing St. Louis to score; the Cardinals won that game, as well.


"Are the mishaps unfortunate coincidence, or is third base becoming Boston's Bermuda Triangle?" Tom asks. "Who knows what answers await."


There will be two more World Series games in St. Louis — Game 4 is tonight. As we reported yesterday, the three-game homestand could allow the Cardinals to win out if they can sweep the Red Sox. It would also allow them to avoid returning to Boston, where an iconic field, boisterous fans, and the designated-hitter rule await.


In the news conference following Game 3, the umpire were joined by Joe Torre, who held up a copy of baseball's rule book to emphasize his point. Here's the relevant passage:


OBSTRUCTION is the act of a fielder who, while not in possession of the ball and not in the act of fielding the ball, impedes the progress of any runner.


Rule 2.00 (Obstruction) Comment: If a fielder is about to receive a thrown ball and if the ball is in flight directly toward and near enough to the fielder so he must occupy his position to receive the ball he may be considered in the act of fielding a ball. It is entirely up to the judgment of the umpire as to whether a fielder is in the act of fielding a ball. After a fielder has made an attempt to field a ball and missed, he can no longer be in the act of fielding the ball. For example: If an infielder dives at a ground ball and the ball passes him and he continues to lie on the ground and delays the progress of the runner, he very likely has obstructed the runner.


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/10/27/241152728/cardinals-get-a-walk-off-world-series-win-on-bizarre-play?ft=1&f=1001
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Rossi, Roma top AP weekly soccer poll

Fiorentina's Giuseppe Rossi celebrates after scoring during a Serie A soccer match between Fiorentina and Juventus at the Artemio Franchi stadium in Florence, Italy, Sunday, Oct. 20, 2013. (AP Photo/Fabrizio Giovannozzi)







Fiorentina's Giuseppe Rossi celebrates after scoring during a Serie A soccer match between Fiorentina and Juventus at the Artemio Franchi stadium in Florence, Italy, Sunday, Oct. 20, 2013. (AP Photo/Fabrizio Giovannozzi)







Paris Saint Germain's Zlatan Ibrahimovic, top, jumps in the air after scoring the second goal against Bastia, during the French League One soccer match between Paris Saint Germain and Bastia, at the Parc des Princes stadium, in Paris, Saturday, Oct. 19, 2013.(AP Photo/Remy de la Mauviniere)







AS Roma's Miralem Pjanic of Bosnia and Herzegovina scores on a penalty kick during a Serie A soccer match between AS Roma and Napoli at Rome's Olympic stadium, Friday, Oct. 18, 2013. (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia)







(AP) — Giuseppe Rossi's hat trick for Fiorentina against Serie A champion Juventus earned him the top player vote in The Associated Press global soccer poll this week, while Roma remained first in the club rankings.

Rossi, the new leading scorer in Serie A with eight goals, inspired his team to an astonishing comeback from 2-0 down by scoring three times in 14 minutes.

"Juventus were leading 2-0 in Florence with less than half an hour to go when 'Pepito' stole the show and turned the game upside down," said Aurelio Capaldi of RAI Sport in Italy. "He scored a terrific treble and became the nightmare of Juventus defenders. It ended up 4-2 and Fiorentina celebrated an unforgettable day for them."

Rossi headed off second-placed Zlatan Ibrahimovic, who scored a pair for Paris Saint-Germain including an incredible back-heel flick, and third-placed Miralem Pjanic of Roma.

Pjanic scored both as his side beat second--placed Napoli 2-0 to stay top of Serie A with eight wins in eight games.

"The manner of Roma's victory on Friday evening against Napoli was almost as eye-opening as the gap it has allowed them to open at the summit of Serie A," said Richard Winton of The Herald in Scotland. "Rudi Garcia has his side playing some stunning football and to sweep aside a Champions League team in such a way was awesome."

English Premier League leader Arsenal polled second following its 4-1 demolition of Norwich.

Mesut Ozil scored twice for Arsenal and is fourth in the player vote by 25 global soccer writers, a rise of six places from the previous poll.

Ozil's Germany teammate, Thomas Mueller, was ninth after he scored twice in Bayern Munich's 4-1 comeback win over Mainz which gave the club fourth in the poll.

James Thorogood, editor of Bundesliga.com, cited Pep Guardiola's decision to introduce Mario Goetze at halftime with his team trailing 1-0 as a key moment in the game.

"It was the first time the Bavarians had fallen behind under head coach Pep Guardiola, yet the Spaniard's masterstroke to throw Goetze into the fray breathed new life into his side," Thorogood said.

Goetze is eighth in the poll.

Real Madrid polled seventh after its 2-0 home victory against Malaga. The win was particularly important as Barcelona and Atletico Madrid dropped points with a draw against Osasuna and a defeat against Espanyol respectively.

Real are third in La Liga, two points behind Atletico and three away from Barcelona.

Southampton polled 10th after its surprising start continued with a 1-1 draw against Manchester United at Old Trafford.

___

AP Global Soccer 10 rankings, week ending Oct. 22

Players:

1. Giuseppe Rossi, 192 points.

2. Zlatan Ibrahimovic, 147.

3. Miralem Pjanic, 143.

4. Mesut Ozil, 133.

5. Sergio Aguero, 80.

6. Edinson Cavani, 61.

(tie) Eden Hazard 61.

8. Mario Goetze, 60.

9. Thomas Mueller, 39.

10. Wilfredo Caballero, 37.

Teams:

1. Roma, 211.

2. Arsenal, 203.

3. Fiorentina, 177.

4. Bayern Munich, 148.

5. Paris Saint-Germain, 135.

6. Chelsea, 85.

7. Real Madrid, 65.

8. Manchester City, 50.

9. Espanyol, 45.

10. Southampton, 26.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-10-22-SOC-AP-Global-Soccer-10/id-53f89f5843254861944f7cd9536e0aaa
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Why LinkedIn's new Intro feature is scary as hell and needs to die by fire

Why LinkedIn's new Intro feature is scary as hell and needs to die by fire

LinkedIn released what, on the surface, sounds like a great new feature: Intro. It lets you have fancy business-centric HTML content injected right in your emails. If the word injected seems odd, it should. The way Intro is implemented, it destroys security and privacy in mail. Scratch the great sounding surface, and you find a minefield. Matthew Panzarino on TechCrunch:

Even if you aren’t one of these corporate clients, adding in an interstitial proxy server that even temporarily handles your email is not a good idea – especially if the company who runs the server has been the victim of an enormous data theft hack which nabbed some 6.5M passwords and was shown to be transmitting emails, names and notes from your calendar in plain text. Both of which occurred in the last 18 months. I’m just not sure that LinkedIn doing ‘everything we can’ to keep us safe is good enough in this case.

Exactly right. I can't imagine any security expert or IT administrator would look at the diagram in Matthew's post and not react with shock, disbelief, and outright rejection.

Super smart engineers at LinkedIn no doubt built something awesome - it just happens to be a bomb. That's why engineering departments have marketing, legal, and simple product oversight divisions to go with them. They're supposed to say, hey, wait, yeah, super cool... we're never, not ever, going to build that.

LinkedIn's new Intro feature is insanely clever, but it's a security and privacy nightmare waiting to happen. It shouldn't be used, not by anyone, and LinkedIn should kill it by fire.

Source: TechCrunch


    






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The Other IPO Roadshow: Design Your Initial Product Offering To Attract Fortune 500 Enterprises


Editor’s note: Deepak Jeevan Kumar is a Principal at General Catalyst Partners, a Venture Capital firm with offices in Palo Alto, Boston and New York. He focuses on funding and launching big data, cloud computing and cybersecurity startups. Follow him on Twitter @DJKHacker.


Getting to a successful initial public offering is not an easy road for enterprise startups selling to Fortune 500 customers. Earlier in the lifecycle, the first question of death they encounter is: “Who are your other customers?”


This can be effectively addressed by taking your startup on the other IPO roadshow: the initial product offering roadshow targeted at Fortune 500 enterprises.


Unlike consumer products, where early users will join a platform to discover something new, CIO offices in Fortune 500 companies are trained to play it safe. Many companies stick to Oracle, VMWare, EMC and Cisco not because their products are the best in the world, but because no one got fired for selecting one of them. Asking about your other customers is a way of de-risking the purchase decision – air cover in case something goes wrong.


There are a few simple and concrete steps available to founders to develop this “quotable referencability.” Never before has it been easy for startups to engage CIO offices. In this era when cloud computing, big data, international cybercrime and mobile are simultaneously disrupting decades-old legacy infrastructure in most CIO departments, Fortune 500 enterprises realize that they will be left behind if they don’t use innovative products from startups. So how do you programmatically exploit this opening to win reference customers?


Start with an ‘Initial Product Offering’ Roadshow 


“Sell first and code next” is my advice to any enterprise entrepreneur trying to win Fortune 500 reference customers. Selling starts before you develop your alpha/beta product and not after it.


Once you have convinced your VCs to fund your seed or series A round, it is your privilege to ask them to help you organize an initial product offering roadshow, aka a design customer roadshow. While most VCs are great in helping with ultimate initial public offering roadshows, very few can guide you through the first initial product offering roadshows. This is more than just making a couple of customer introductions. You need guidance in planning a trip to NYC and Boston to meet with 10-30 of the top financial institutions, pharma companies, insurance majors and media conglomerates.



Many companies stick to Oracle, VMWare, EMC and Cisco not because their products are the best in the world, but because no one got fired for selecting one of them.



Getting to the right person in these organizations is key. Busy Fortune 500 executives will give you guidance only if the intro comes from a prior entrepreneur they have engaged with or from a trusted VC who is familiar with the problem domain. It is also important that the founders (not product managers or sales engineers) represent the startup in these early discussions.


In my work as a venture capitalist, I find this roadshow to be the most crucial eye-opening experience for engineer-founders who have no prior interaction with Fortune 500 companies in a sales role. It helps them understand the meaning of the notoriously long enterprise sales cycle that may include RFPs, the complexity of the decision-making processes involving many stakeholders and the importance of finding a “budget.”


Develop The Minimum Viable Product With Your Customers


When you are on this roadshow, you are not expected to have a beta product, but you can still engage these prospective customers on key sea changes in the industry, their perceived needs and your mission on changing the world. Jointly brainstorm an architecture/product design that can help them address this change in a 10x cost-efficient and 10x faster manner. Make them feel a part of the company’s creation process. The output of this roadshow is to select three to five design customers who are willing to engage on paid PoCs (proof of concept). Select only those design customers who have been quotable references to other startups before.


After securing soft commitments from design customers, it is time to start developing your alpha product. This may take 3-12 months. Keep your design customers engaged through this long hiatus by giving them key milestone updates and organizing joint design discussions. Make them feel like they are developing the product with you. Be well-informed on their budget changes and ensure that they still have a budget allocated to engage you on a paid PoC.


Undertake Only Paid PoC Engagements


Do not use unpaid PoCs even if you have to wait one to two months to get a paid PoC. The best VCs realize this and will tolerate such delays. The conversion rate of a paid PoC to a “production-referencable” sale is significantly higher than the conversion rate of an unpaid PoC. Understand what success in a PoC means. Define clear parameters and talk to other startups that have undertaken PoCs with the same customers. Make sure your sponsor has experience in helping other startups through this conversion process. Once you have completed a PoC, convince your design customer to be a reference for future investors and other customers.


It is a good practice to hire a program manager and a sales engineer to ensure the smooth running of these PoCs. I have also seen a few startups first engage in testing the waters with alpha PoCs before starting an almost-feature-complete beta PoC for a much larger group of customers. This is specifically useful when you have a complicated product that has a long development cycle and also has multi-week testing cycles for customers to appreciate its complete value proposition.



Power and influence in the early days can come from public silence for enterprise startups.



Use Stealth Mode


Don’t talk about your product until you’re ready for its general availability. This serves three purposes. First, it keeps you focused on the proof-of-concept game. I have seen enterprise startups that stay in stealth mode for two years after funding to ensure that they have a few key reference customers before announcing the product publicly. You can’t open many war fronts. An all-out PR war front is unnecessary, as you already know who your design customers are.


Second, power and influence in the early days can come from public silence for enterprise startups (unlike consumer startups). Your competitors, the media and your customers like a game of treasure hunt to find out what you are doing. As you are selling to a select group of Fortune 500 customers, there is no point in announcing to your powerful enterprise tech competitors (e.g Cisco, Oracle, IBM, HP) what you are up to. Convince your design customers first before you open up the kimono.


Finally, stealth-mode PR is highly recommended instead of an open all-out PR strategy where all details are disclosed publicly. The cornerstones of stealth-mode PR are: a) speaking in industry conferences about where the world should be headed to enable a key transition and how you may have a unique plan to enable that key transition; b) getting your design customers to talk to their fellow CIOs and to the investment community; and c) engaging industry analysts and mentors.


Engage Analysts And Industry Mentors


Successful startups almost never sell to just two to three customers. There is a major risk that is built-in to the design customer PoC strategy described above. You can become hyper-focused on solving the problems of your design customers and forget that the product you create should be widely usable in the industry. You can mitigate this risk by engaging a few key external stakeholders in this phase.


Firstly, recruit a strong sales oriented entrepreneur to be a mentor, adviser or a board member. Such a person can provide expert advice on the problem described above, guide you in converting paid PoCs to production sales and help craft your recruitment strategy.


Start briefing industry analysts such as Gartner, IDC, 451 Research and Forrester. Boutique analysts such as Bernd Harzog and Curt Monash also have influence in the customer community. Get them to talk to their Fortune 500 clients about you and to provide you with the feedback.


It is also a good practice to open early discussions with key channel partners such as Trace3 and Cambridge Computer, who have experience in guiding early-stage startups to expand your beta customer pipeline. They give you an extraordinary amount of leverage in helping you focus your resources on your direct engagements.


Keep these stakeholders informed of your PoCs and reference wins. At the same time, keep these interactions limited to two to three industry analysts and two to three channel partners to maintain the stealth-mode effect.


General availability 


Once you are through these steps you have validated your product-market fit. You have a few quotable reference customers and solved the first chicken-or-the-egg problem. And you’re now ready for GA of your product, which will be the next inflection point in your startup’s lifecycle.


This is when you start talking publicly about your company and vision. The next sales steps are to create a repeatable sales process and scale the revenues. For that you will have to raise a series B, hire a strong sales team, win the love of channel partners, start your public-facing content marketing strategy, create a top-notch customer advisory board, raise a few larger rounds to reach $100M in annual revenue and establish thought-leadership in CIO forums. And that will position you well for a successful IPO roadshow.


Image: Flickr



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iPads are overpriced... compared to what?

iPads are overpriced... compared to what?

Before the iPad launched it was rumored to cost $1000. When Steve Jobs announced it at an Apple special event in 2010, the starting price ended up being $500. Given the expectation and the presentation, the price sounded great. Now, following the latest iPad event, and the introducing of the iPad Air and Retina iPad mini, there are grumblings that the price is too high. That Apple is blowing it. In a short, but very worthwhile blog post today, independent analyst and consultant Benedict Evans published his thoughts on iPad pricing.

If you take a look at the iPad sales table in his piece, you’ll see what appears to be a scary story. iPad volume has been falling slightly, but all of this has been happening while Android tablet volume has risen tremendously. Knowing that Android tablets are significantly cheaper, it can lead to the belief that the iPad is starting to fail because it isn’t price-competitive any more.

But here’s the kicker: A huge chunk of the Android tablet volume is in the form of $75-100 units sold in China, according to Evans. The people who buy these, he suggests that:

They're being used for a little bit of web, and a bit of free gaming. Perhaps some book reading. And a LOT of video consumption. In fact, one might argue that for many buyers, these compete with TVs, not iPads, Nexuses and Tabs.

He concludes by saying there are really two quite different markets. You have what he calls the “post-PC vision”, where Apple is clobbering Microsoft, and where people looking to marry PC with mobile are choosing Apple. And you have the ultra-low margin product that still carries the “tablet” label, but Evans considers a totally different product.

I have to say, I think he makes a great point. Apple isn’t competing with cheap Chinese tablets. Apple is making the post-PC world fun and easy. I’m happy to pay an extra $1-200 for a tablet that makes my life more fun and simple.

Many people are.


    






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Apple gears up for holidays with new Macs, iPads

Phil Schiller, Apple's senior vice president of worldwide product marketing, introduces the new iPad Air on Tuesday, Oct. 22, 2013, in San Francisco. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)







Phil Schiller, Apple's senior vice president of worldwide product marketing, introduces the new iPad Air on Tuesday, Oct. 22, 2013, in San Francisco. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)







Apple CEO Tim Cook speaks on stage before a new product introduction on Tuesday, Oct. 22, 2013, in San Francisco. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)







Craig Federighi, senior vice president of Software Engineering at Apple, speaks on stage before a new product announcement on Tuesday, Oct. 22, 2013, in San Francisco. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)







Apple CEO Tim Cook speaks on stage before a new product introduction on Tuesday, Oct. 22, 2013, in San Francisco. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)







Craig Federighi, senior vice president of Software Engineering at Apple, speaks on stage before a new product announcement on Tuesday, Oct. 22, 2013, in San Francisco. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)







SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Apple Inc. is refreshing its iPad lineup in hopes of reclaiming lost ground in the tablet market and slashing the prices of its Mac computers to intensify the pressure on the beleaguered makers of PCs running Microsoft's Windows.

Tuesday's unveiling of Apple's latest products primes the company for a holiday shopping season onslaught aimed at a list of rivals that includes Google Inc., Samsung Electronics, Amazon.com Inc. and Microsoft Corp.

A thinner, lighter and faster-running tablet computer called the iPad Air highlighted the event in San Francisco. Apple Inc. also showed off a souped-up iPad Mini that boasts a faster microprocessor, a high-definition display screen and a higher price than its predecessor.

The iPad upgrades, coming a year after the release of the tablet's previous generation, fell largely in line with analyst expectations.

In a surprise, Apple is introducing slightly revamped MacBook Pros at prices 9 percent to 13 percent below the previous versions. What's more, Apple is giving away its latest Mac operating system — Mavericks — for free, as well as several pieces of software, including programs called iWorks and iLife that provide many of the same tools as Microsoft's Office.

"We are turning the industry on its ear," Apple CEO Tim Cook said of the company's strategy.

Technology analyst Patrick Moorhead predicted the discounted MacBook Pros will force personal computer makers to cut the prices of their machines by at least $100 for the holidays.

And Ovum analyst Jan Dawson thinks Apple's giveaway of the operating system and software programs "is now teaching people to expect both of those things to be free. While this won't disrupt Microsoft's business overnight, it will create further pressure on Microsoft to bring down prices."

If that happens, it would be another blow for Microsoft, which has seen its Windows revenue suffer in recent years as personal computer sales sink amid a shift to smartphones and tablets.

Apple triggered the upheaval with the 2007 release of the first iPhone followed up with the 2010 introduction of the iPad.

While both products have a fierce following, Apple has been losing market share to rivals who primarily make mobile devices running on Google's Android software. As Apple is now doing with its Mavericks software for Macs, Google gives away Android to device makers who can afford to undercut the prices for iPhones and iPads.

Despite the competitive pressure, Apple has steadfastly refused to cut prices on its top-of-the-line products. Instead, it has sold older versions of its Phones and iPads at slight discounts to consumers who are willing to settle for something less than state-of-the-art technology.

The Cupertino, Calif. company is hewing to that philosophy with its latest tablets. The iPad Air will start at $499, just like its predecessors, while the new iPad Mini will sell for $399 — a 21 percent increase from the price of the first Mini. The price of the original Mini, which runs at slower speeds and lacks a high-definition display screen, is falling from $329 to $299.

As it has done for more than year, Apple will continue selling the iPad 2 — a tablet that came out two-and-half years ago — for $399.

"Apple doesn't want to play in the mud with declining prices" on iPads, Moorhead said.

The strategy hasn't been a hit with investors who are unhappy with the Cupertino, Calif. company's slowing growth as it loses sales to lower-priced alternatives. Wall Street also is disillusioned with Apple's lack of another breakthrough product since the death of co-founder and chief visionary Steve Jobs two years ago.

Apple's stock dipped $1.49 to close at $519.87 Tuesday. The shares remain about 25 percent below their peak reached 13 months ago.

The iPad Air's main appeal is a more svelte design and a faster microprocessor, the same kind of chip in the iPhone 5S that Apple released a month ago. The new tablet weighs just 1 pound, compared with 1.4 pounds for the previous version. Apple marketing chief Phil Schiller hailed it as a "screaming fast iPad," noting that it is eight times faster than the original model that came out in 2010.

The iPad Air will go on sale Nov. 1. The new iPad Mini will be available at a still-to-be-determined date later in November.

They are coming out at a time when Apple needs to reassert itself in a tablet market. Google, Amazon.com and Samsung have been winning over consumers with flashy tablets that sell for $200 to $400. None of the rivals boast the 475,000 apps that Apple says are made for the iPad, but that vast selection hasn't mattered to many cost-conscious consumers.

The research firm Gartner Inc. estimates that Android tablets will end 2013 with a 50 percent share of the worldwide market versus 49 percent for the iPad. Just two years ago, the iPad commanded a 65 percent market share compared to 30 percent for Android tablets.

Apple sold 14.6 million iPads during the three months ending in June, down 14 percent from the same time last year. It marked the first time Apple has posted a year-over-year decline in iPad sales.

It might have happened again in the latest quarter ending in September. Although Apple isn't scheduled to report its results for the latest quarter until next Monday, a statistic released at Tuesday's event gave a hint of how the iPad fared in the period.

Cook said Apple's total iPad sales since the device's inception surpassed 170 million units earlier this month. Given that Apple sold 155 million iPads through June, that means fewer than 15 million were sold in the quarter ending in September. Apple sold 14 million iPads in last year's quarter ending in September.

__

Ortutay reported from New York.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-10-22-US-TEC-Apple-Event/id-aacb1e53d77d46bda1e6493421b1a5d1
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Blue Ivy Carter Is Playing The Piano Already



The Chosen One is Blessed





Yesterday we got to see a cool video shared by Beyoncé from her recent visit to New Zealand where she got the crazy idea to jump off a building there. Today we get to see a really cute photo, also shared by Beyoncé on her official website, that shows just how big and grown her daughter Blue Ivy is these days. As you can see below, Blue Ivy (and her big cousin Julez) were photographed playing the piano together … proving, once again, that the apple does not fall far from the extremely talented tree.





Even tho it’s more likely that Blue and Julez are probably pounding on the piano keys rather than actually playing them, it’s still an insanely cute photo. I cannot believe that little Blue is so big already. Man, this little girl is going to grow up and run the world, I can just feel it. Prince George Louis Alexander may one day be King of England but I’m telling you right now, Blue Ivy is going to grow up to rule the world. Trust me on that. I love so much that Bey is so generous with the sharing of these kinds of photos. Keep ‘em coming, Bey Bey!

[Source]





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JPMorgan Chase Agrees To Pay $5.1 Billion To Feds

[unable to retrieve full-text content]JPMorgan Chase agreed pay $5.1 billion to settle litigation over mortgage assets sold during the housing bubble. The deal, announced late Friday afternoon, is to resolve claims the company misled Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac before the housing market crashed. It is part of a tentative $13 billion deal the company is trying to reach with federal and state agencies over its mortgage liabilities.Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/NprProgramsATC/~3/FFuMC51rbAw/jp-morgan-chase-agrees-to-pay-5-1-billion-to-feds
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Saturday, October 26, 2013

Mojave Desert gunman's life crumbled to bloody end

This video image provided by KCBS-TV shows the site of s shooting Friday Oct. 25, 2013 ion Ridgecrest, Calif. A homicide suspect was killed by police on this Mojave Desert highway early Friday after a lengthy pursuit in which the man fired at vehicles and two hostages in his car trunk, authorities said.(AP Photo/KCBS-TV)







This video image provided by KCBS-TV shows the site of s shooting Friday Oct. 25, 2013 ion Ridgecrest, Calif. A homicide suspect was killed by police on this Mojave Desert highway early Friday after a lengthy pursuit in which the man fired at vehicles and two hostages in his car trunk, authorities said.(AP Photo/KCBS-TV)







This undated photo provided by the Ridgecrest, Calif. police shows Sergio Munoz. Ridgecrest police have identified Munoz, 39, as the gunman who fatally shot a woman, injured another and then led police on a wild chase before he was killed in a shootout on Friday, Oct. 25, 2013. (AP Photo/Ridgecrest Police)







Passersby peer into a house Friday Oct. 25, 2013, where gunman Sergio Munoz shot two people, a man and a woman, killing the woman, before leading police on a chase through the Mojave Desert, before being shot and killed by police near Ridgecrest, Calif. (AP Photo/Justin Pritchard)







Map locates Ridgecrest, Calif.; 1c x 3 inches; 46.5 mm x 76 mm;







A view of the bloodied front door at a house where gunman Sergio Munoz shot two people, Friday Oct. 25, 2013, a man and a woman, killing the woman, before leading police on a chase with two hostages, through the Mojave Desert, before being shot and killed by police near Ridgecrest, Calif. (AP Photo/Justin Pritchard)







(AP) — Sergio Munoz was known around this small desert city to acquaintances as a personable dad, and to police for his long rap sheet.

In recent weeks, he began losing the moorings of a stable life — his job, then his family. Kicked out of the house, he had been staying at a friend's place, using and dealing heroin.

Life fully unraveled when Munoz, with two hostages in his trunk, led officers on a wild chase Friday after killing a woman and injuring his crash-pad friend. He shot the friend after he had refused to join what Munoz planned would be a final rampage against police and "snitches."

Munoz knew the authorities well enough that after the initial, pre-dawn slaying he called one patrol officer's cellphone and announced that he wanted to kill all police in town. Because he would be outgunned at the station he would instead "wreak havoc" elsewhere, Kern County Sheriff Donny Youngblood said at a news conference Friday.

Munoz kept his word, first firing at drivers in Ridgecrest, according to police, then taking shots at pursuing officers and passing motorists during a chase along 30 miles of highway that runs through the shrub-dotted desert about 150 miles north of Los Angeles. He ran traffic off the road, firing at least 10 times at passing vehicles with a shotgun and a handgun, though no one was hurt.

In the end, Munoz pulled over on U.S. 395, turned in his seat and began shooting into the trunk — which had popped open earlier in the pursuit to reveal a man and woman inside.

As many as seven officers opened fire and killed him. The hostages were flown to a hospital in critical condition, but were expected to survive. Their names have not been released and police have not said anything about their relationship to Munoz.

In the neighborhood where the first shooting happened, people said Munoz was an affable man who would stop to chat, revealing no signs of inner turmoil.

"He didn't show any anger," said Edgar Martinez, who would see Munoz at a nearby gym and said he cleaned his house several years ago.

Others described him as respectful and humble.

But recently, his life began to crumble.

First, he became unemployed. According to his Facebook page, Munoz worked at Searles Valley Minerals, a company that makes products such as borax and soda ash by extracting a salty mix from beneath a desert lake bed. It was not clear whether he lost his job at Searles, or another business, and officials at Searles were unreachable Saturday.

Last Sunday, Munoz, 39, was arrested again — police found ammunition and a syringe at the house where the slaying would happen five days later. Munoz is a felon with convictions dating back to 1994, when he was sentenced to more than two years in prison for receiving stolen property. In May, he was arrested for possessing ammunition as a felon, but the felony charge was dismissed.

After making bail on the latest arrest, Munoz returned to the house where he first started staying about two weeks ago.

A neighbor heard Munoz bemoaning his life, saying he was losing everything due to drugs.

"He was a cool guy," said the neighbor, Derrick Holland. "He was just losing his mind."

Munoz's estranged wife, Sandra Leiva, said that they separated because she finally had enough of his bad choices.

"Tough love and drugs, that's what brought him down," Leiva said.

On Saturday morning, Munoz's 15-year-old daughter, Viviana, reflected on her father's life in a Facebook post.

"Your such a great dad when you were not on drugs...I remember how you used always try and teach us how to dance all crazy with your chicken legs haha," she wrote. "You were a good father and person, you just made a sad choice."

She promised to watch over her two younger brothers, now that their dad was gone.

Ridgecrest is a city of about 27,000 people adjacent to the vast Naval Air Weapons Station China Lake. It sits near U.S. 395, which runs through the western Mojave, below the eastern flank of the Sierra Nevada.

"It's a small town, pretty much everybody knows everybody," said Ridgecrest police Sgt. Jed McLaughlin, who himself had arrested Munoz about 10 years ago.

The violence that ended with Munoz's roadside death began Friday around 5:30 a.m. when Munoz rolled up the driveway to the house where he had been staying with his friend, Thaddeus Meier, and Meier's longtime girlfriend.

"We're going to reduce all of the snitches in town," Munoz told Meier after rousing him with a knock on the front door, according to Meier's sister, Dawn, recounting what her brother said from the hospital.

When her brother declined, Munoz shot him at least twice, then shot and killed Meier's girlfriend. Her identity has not been released.

Dawn Meier said she saw Munoz using heroin and dealing the drug out of the house. She had been staying there with her brother until about a week ago, when her boyfriend insisted that she move out with her 7-month-old son due to all the drug-related foot traffic.

She said her brother called Munoz "a very, very good friend of mine" but that she is a good judge of character and thought him unpredictable, "just by the vibes I got."

___

Associated Press writer Tami Abdollah in Los Angeles contributed to this report.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-10-26-US-Mojave-Desert-Shootout/id-dd98f42021b649888afd2cd1e6a1576c
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iStat Menus gets updated with Mavericks fixes, new Mac support, more

iStat Menus gets updated with Mavericks fixes, new Mac support, more

One of my favorite OS X utilites, Bjango's iStat Menus, has been updated with improved Mavericks support, support for new Mac models and other changes.

iStat Menus embeds a menu item on your Mac that provides you with extensive, customizable details about the operation of your computer - how much memory and hard disk space is being used, how network traffic is utilized, the temperature of individual components on your Mac's motherboard, speed of the fans, and lots of other details - most available at a glance in easy-to-understand graphs that can be nested hierarchically off a single, unobtrusive menu item.

Here's the complete list of changes in 4.1:

  • Improved Mavericks support.
  • Added support for late 2013 iMacs.
  • Added support for late 2013 MacBook Pros.
  • Fixed an issue with menubar bandwidth being incorrect when connected to a VPN.
  • Fixed link to Network Utility in Mavericks.
  • Fixed a calendar display bug.
  • Fixed an issue with IP Addresses not being updated.
  • Improved support for FireWire disks.


    






Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/b1e8_xXyEG8/story01.htm
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Teacher Killed By 12-Year-Old Student Remembered

Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/10/24/240428486/teacher-killed-by-12-year-old-student-remembered?ft=1&f=3
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What To Watch For In The World Series


David Greene talks to NPR's Mike Pesca about this year's World Series, which starts Wednesday night in Boston.



Copyright © 2013 NPR. For personal, noncommercial use only. See Terms of Use. For other uses, prior permission required.


DAVID GREENE, HOST:


For the first time since 1999, the two teams with the best record in baseball will meet in the World Series. The Boston Red Sox host the St. Louis Cardinals at Fenway Park tonight.


Enough said, let's bring in NPR's Mike Pesca. Hey, Mike.


MIKE PESCA, BYLINE: Hi.


GREENE: You're going to be at the game.


PESCA: Yes.


GREENE: So we have the two teams with the two best records. That has to tell us something about his World Series. Or maybe in this crazy world of sports it tells us nothing.


PESCA: Or in the crazy sport of baseball, actually you're right, it kind of doesn't. I mean you mentioned 1999, that was a stinker of a World Series. The Yankees swept the Braves. The Braves had a much better record even than the Yankees did. And then you go back to some recent series were teams that were wildcards and, quote-unquote, "snuck in" like in 2002. The Angel/Giants that went seven - that was a great World Series. So yes, there's not a whole lot of correlation.


In general the correlation between the regular season and the postseason often becomes tenuous. We see things like great players through the regular season slump. We see nobodies delivering the clutch. And that's because the baseball season is so long, it gives us a false sense of how good or bad anyone could be on a given day.


I mean if a guy is a 300 hitter that says what? Oh, that guy can hit. But if you take any seven-game snapshot may be he's a 180 hitter over that snapshot. You know, it's more likely he'll be a 320 hitter or a 300 hitter but there's far from a guarantee in the sport of baseball.


GREENE: So we'll watch to see who the heroes that will emerge.


PESCA: I'm being paid to, yes.


(LAUGHTER)


GREENE: Well, let's start with the St. Louis Cardinals. I mean a franchise that just a stays right towards the top. What makes them so good?


PESCA: That's it, steady efficiency. I mean they have a great farm system. They have so many good pitchers that they have Shelby Miller, a young 15-game-winner. He's like the sixth guy on their staff. They're very good from top to bottom. They have few weaknesses. They have the Cardinal Way which has been derided a little bit for its arrogance. I don't know if the players themselves buy into it, as much some of the very proud fans do.


But they do have an ethic of success and culture in getting things done. And they are a model organization in this sport.


GREENE: Well, besides the beards that the Boston Red Sox players have grown to bond together, what gives them the chance to come on top of the Cardinals?


PESCA: I think looseness. I think, you know, sheer talent from top to bottom. I think their strategy of hitting crucial game-winning grand slams in the last series, if they could light upon that strategy again...


GREENE: That would work, two of them and the American League championships series.


PESCA: Yes. And it has this great study in contrasts because you know Boston, which is this real loose team which is a team with a lot of characters who embraces them. And you have the Cardinals, a team that, you know, Adam Wainwright - starter in Game 1 - set up one of his last opponents, Adrian Gonzalez, was behaving in a Mickey Mouse fashion by being too enthusiastic. Some Cardinals players also criticized the Yasiel Puig for perhaps over-celebrating, and not knowing how the game should be played.


So, you know, you have this contrast between those who criticize others for being Mickey Mouse, and the Red Sox who are just plain goofy.


(LAUGHTER)


GREENE: Goofy and slow, right? I mean one thing we know about this we know about this World Series with the Red Sox involved, we're going to have some long games.


PESCA: They are pretty fast on the bases but, man, do they take their time. Clay Buchholtz, even with no one on base, their pitcher takes between like 18 and 26 seconds to deliver a pitch, one-nothing games going almost four hours. The Red Sox do take up a lot of your patience. But then, I guess, they deliver the big dramatic hits when it counts. Still, could we do that here in three and a half hours, guys? Is that too much to ask?


(LAUGHTER)


GREENE: The journalists who are going to be at Fenway tonight, you guys grow beards or something to bond over this whole thing?


PESCA: I can't help it. I got a five o'clock shadow at two.


GREENE: Nice, can't wait to see it. NPR's Mike Pesca, who will be at tonight's game at Fenway Park Game 1 of the World Series. Mike, thanks.


PESCA: You're welcome.


Copyright © 2013 NPR. All rights reserved. No quotes from the materials contained herein may be used in any media without attribution to NPR. 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/2013/10/23/240163081/what-to-watch-for-in-the-world-series?ft=1&f=3
Category: bob costas   drew brees   Paula Patton   Boulder Flooding   Lavabit  

Police chase gunman, hostages across Mojave Desert


RIDGECREST, Calif. (AP) — Police were investigating a deadly shooting in this Mojave Desert city when they got a chilling call — from the killer.

Sergio Munoz said he wanted to deliver a "package" to police and kill officers, but to avoid being outgunned at the station he would instead "wreak havoc" elsewhere.

Munoz kept his word Friday during a nearly hour-long chase. With two hostages in the trunk of his car, Munoz sped along some 30 miles of desert highway, taking shots at passing motorists and trying to run oncoming cars off the road before police finally killed him in a hail of gunfire.

Investigators were puzzling over what triggered the rampage by Munoz, 39, a reputed heroin dealer with a criminal record stretching back at least two decades.

There were signs that his life had been unraveling.

The sister of the man wounded in a pre-dawn shooting that began the deadly day said Munoz was a heroin dealer who had been staying at her brother's house for about two weeks.

Dawn Meier told The Associated Press her brother, Thaddeus Meier, told her Munoz was a good friend he wanted to help out so let him crash, but that Munoz had been using and dealing black tar heroin.

She moved out of the house a week ago to join her boyfriend, who lived next door, after he insisted she get her 7-month-old son away from the drug-related traffic.

Her boyfriend, Derrick Holland, said that on Thursday he heard Munoz complaining in the yard about how his life was falling apart and he was losing everything "due to drugs."

Ridgecrest police said Munoz had lost his job recently.

Early Friday morning, Munoz showed up and told Thaddeus Meier, "We're going to reduce all of the snitches in town," Dawn Meier said her brother recounted from the hospital.

When her brother declined, Munoz shot him at least twice, then shot and killed Meier's girlfriend.

Later that morning, Munoz called a police officer on his cellphone, Kern County Sheriff Donny Youngblood said at a press conference.

Munoz said he had a package for police and wanted to come to the police station and "kill all the officers but they had too many guns," Youngblood said.

Police now believe the "package" was the hostages.

Nearly two hours later, a sheriff's deputy spotted Munoz's car and a pursuit began through the shrub-dotted desert about 150 miles north of Los Angeles.

Munoz ran traffic off the road, firing at least 10 times at passing vehicles with a shotgun and a handgun. No motorists were hurt, Youngblood said.

At one point during the chase, Munoz pulled over and the car's trunk popped open, revealing a man and woman inside. They appeared to shut the trunk, the sheriff said. Munoz got back in the car and sped off.

In the end, Munoz pulled over again on U.S. 395, turned in his seat and began shooting into the trunk. As many as seven officers opened fire and killed the man.

The hostages were flown to a hospital in critical condition, but were expected to survive.

Munoz is a felon with convictions dating back to 1994, when he was sentenced to more than two years in prison for receiving stolen property.

In May, he was arrested for possessing ammunition as a felon, but the felony charge was dismissed. Munoz was most recently arrested Sunday for investigation of possessing controlled substance paraphernalia and a felony charge of possessing ammunition as a felon. Dawn Meier said police found a syringe at the home where the slaying would happen five days later.

Ridgecrest is a city of about 27,000 people adjacent to the vast Naval Air Weapons Station China Lake, which sprawls over more than 1,700 square miles of desert. U.S. 395 runs through the western Mojave, below the eastern flank of the Sierra Nevada.

Ridgecrest Mayor Dan Clark called the incident disturbing, especially because the small city is relatively crime free.

___

AP Writers Tami Abdollah and Greg Risling in Los Angeles contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/police-chase-gunman-hostages-across-mojave-desert-055301171.html
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Obama, Pakistani PM meet amid easing tensions

Pakistan's Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif arrives at the White House in Washington, Wednesday, Oct. 23, 2013, for his meeting with President Barack Obama. The White House said that the leaders would discus, trade, energy, economic development, and efforts to address violent extremism. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)







Pakistan's Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif arrives at the White House in Washington, Wednesday, Oct. 23, 2013, for his meeting with President Barack Obama. The White House said that the leaders would discus, trade, energy, economic development, and efforts to address violent extremism. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)







An armored sports utility vehicle carrying Pakistan's Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif drives past a military honor cordon as he arrives at the White House in Washington, Wednesday, Oct. 23, 2013, for his meeting with President Barack Obama. The White House said that the leaders would discus, trade, energy, economic development, and efforts to address violent extremism. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)







Supporters of Pakistan's Islamist party Pasban, rally against US drone strikes on hideouts of militants in the country's tribal areas, in Karachi, Pakistan, Wednesday, Oct. 23, 2013. Pakistan's Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif who is scheduled to meet President Barack Obama, urged the United States to end drone attacks, saying that the unmanned strikes represented a "major irritant" in relations. (AP Photo/Shakil Adil)







(AP) — In the rocky relationship between the U.S. and Pakistan, the mere fact that President Barack Obama and Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif are sitting down together at the White House is seen as a sign of progress.

Few breakthroughs were expected on the numerous hot-button issues on their agenda Wednesday, including American drone strikes and Pakistan's alleged support for the Taliban. But officials in both countries are hoping to scale back tensions that escalated after the 2011 U.S. strike within Pakistan that killed Osama bin Laden and last year's accidental killing of two dozen Pakistani troops in an American airstrike along the Afghan border.

"We want to find ways for our countries to cooperate, even as we have differences on some issues, and we want to make sure that the trajectory of this relationship is a positive one," White House spokesman Jay Carney said.

Sharif was welcomed to the White House Wednesday afternoon by a military honor guard lining the driveway leading to the West Wing. Vice President Joe Biden also held a breakfast meeting with Sharif and first lady Michelle Obama hosted a tea and poetry recital for the prime minister's wife.

Obama and Sharif talked on the phone earlier this year, but they have never met in person. Sharif, who served two earlier stints as Pakistan's prime minister, has held face-to-face talks with Secretary of State John Kerry and was scheduled to meet with other top U.S. officials while in Washington this week.

The prime minister's visit to the White House comes one day after Amnesty International released a report providing new details about the alleged victims of U.S. drone attacks in Pakistan, one of them a 68-year-old grandmother hit while farming with her grandchildren. In Pakistan, there is widespread belief that American drone strikes kill large numbers of civilians and Sharif is expected to raise the issue with Obama.

The White House responded to the Amnesty report by defending the drone program, with Carney saying U.S. counterterrorism operations "are precise, they are lawful and they are effective."

Also on the agenda for Wednesday's meeting will be Obama's looming decision on whether to keep any American troops in Afghanistan after the war there formally concludes at the end of next year. Ahead of the U.S. withdrawal, the U.S. is seeking to push through a peace deal with the Taliban and Afghan government.

Pakistan is seen as key to this process because of its historical connection to the Taliban. It helped the group grab power in Afghanistan in 1996 and is widely believed to have maintained ties as a hedge against neighbor and nuclear rival India — an allegation denied by Islamabad.

Ahead of his trip to the U.S., Sharif said he planned to ask Obama for American intervention in resolving the dispute between Pakistan and India in Kashmir.

On Wednesday, India accused Pakistani troops of firing guns and mortars on at least 50 Indian border posts overnight in Kashmir. Indian troops returned fire, but one Indian guard was killed and six were injured by a shell fired at the Arnia post in the Jammu region, he said.

Indian Foreign Minister Salman Khurshid rejected the idea of U.S. involvement, saying Kashmir was a "bilateral issue between India and Pakistan."

___

Follow Julie Pace at http://twitter.com/jpaceDC

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-10-23-United%20States-Pakistan/id-9066d339e89b44e8a091136ab3129ad8
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The Engadget Podcast is live at 3:30PM ET!

Happy Thursday! We're back in the studio for another episode of The Engadget Podcast. Brian's taking a much-needed vacation this week, so Marc's leading the festivities instead. Tune in at 3:30PM ET to join him, Dana and Terrence -- all framed by some moody blue backlighting, probably. Join us in ...


Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/V7KcHhcCaZI/
Category: breast cancer awareness   iOS 7 Release Time   Wrecking Ball   olinguito   Maria Mitchell  

Bellator 105 Weigh-In Results


Bellator 105 became official tonight in Albuquerque, NM. All fighters would make weight for their respective main card bouts. Tomorrow’s main card will air live via Spike TV and will feature the Season 9 lightweight tournament semifinals beginning at 9PM.


Main Card


  • Bellator Lightweight Semifinal: Will Brooks (155.7) vs. Saad Awad (155.2)

  • Bellator Lightweight Semifinal: Ricardo Tirloni (155.2) vs. Tiger Sarnavskiy (155.1)

  • Mighty Mo (263.7) vs. Ron Sparks (261.2)

  • Keith Berry (185.8) vs. Eugene Fadiora (184.6)

Preliminary Card


  • Desmon Green (146) vs. Angelo Sanchez (145.1)

  • Joseph Bryant (263.3) vs. Raphael Butler (259.8)

  • Volkan Oezdemir (205.3) vs. Josh Lanier (205.4)

  • Luis Nogueira (135.9) vs. Frank Baca (135.3)

  • Jesse Brock (135.3) vs. Adrian Cruz (135.4)

  • Eddie Larrea (180.5) vs. Rocky Ramirez (186)

  • Steve Garcia (135.1) vs. Shawn Bunch (135.6)



Source: http://mmafrenzy.com/95361/bellator-105-weigh-in-results/
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Pennsylvania Governor Talks Up Plan To Expand Medicaid His Way





Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Corbett speaks at St. Christopher's Hospital for Children in Philadelphia on Wednesday. Corbett visited the hospital to promote his Healthy Pennsylvania initiative.



Matt Rourke/AP

Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Corbett may have been watching fellow Republican Gov. John Kasich of Ohio who bypassed the Republican Legislature in his state this week to expand Medicaid.


As part of the Affordable Care Act, states have the option to make coverage available to low-income adults, with the federal government picking up the entire tab for the first three years.


Only about half the states so far have planned to do that, starting Jan. 1, and Pennsylvania has, so far, not been among them.


But Corbett is now canvassing the state touting his Healthy Pennsylvania plan, which calls for accepting the federal funding to expand Medicaid, with some caveats.


"We need [a] medical insurance program that's designed for Pennsylvania. One size does not fit all," Corbett said at St. Christopher's Hospital for Children in North Philadelphia recently.


Healthy Pennsylvania would direct newly eligible people, mostly low-income adults without children, into the health insurance exchange where they could buy private coverage. That's in contrast to how it works now, where the state puts Medicaid patients into private managed care plans and sets the rates for what doctors and hospitals are paid.


Corbett's idea is to use the federal expansion funds to subsidize people buying individual plans instead. "Most important, it's not putting 500,000 more people into an entitlement program," he said. "It's putting them in a program where they are invested in the program, they are invested in their health care, in a way where a person in Medicaid may not have that same personal investment," he said.


Last month, the federal government approved a plan by Arkansas that allows new Medicaid recipients to shop for coverage on the insurance exchange. The Arkansas decision shows that the feds are willing to let states be creative with the expanded program. Corbett's plan differs from Arkansas' though, so federal approval isn't guaranteed. He'd also change some current Medicaid benefits and include a job-training component.


"The governor is looking for a way to draw down the federal money," says Nicole Huberfeld, a professor of health law at the University of Kentucky. She's not surprised by Corbett's latest move. "The Legislature may or may not be on board, but the governor recognizes a lot of federal money to be had that will likely save the state a lot of money in the long run," she says.



When the Supreme Court gave the states the option last year to expand Medicaid, many Republicans didn't have an appetite to do it, no matter who paid the bill, according to Matt Baker, a Republican lawmaker in Pennsylvania. "The Democrats in Harrisburg, by and large, support a full-blown Medicaid expansion," he says. "The Republicans do not. And we're very, very concerned about the cost."


But Baker doesn't view Corbett's plan as an expansion because of the shared responsibility element, and it doesn't appear to be facing severe political backlash.


Democratic leaders worry Corbett is moving too slowly and say they want more details. But some advocates for a full expansion are cautiously optimistic, including Michael Race of Pennsylvania's Partnerships for Children. While he "would have preferred to see Medicaid expansion put on the table," he says he was hopeful early on a plan would surface.


The whole plan isn't a done deal, but the University of Kentucky's Huberfeld says one thing is clear: Federal officials at the Department of Health and Human Services have signaled from the outset that they're willing to work with states to give them maximum flexibility to expand Medicaid under their own terms.


This piece is part of a collaboration among NPR, WHYY and Kaiser Health News.


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/NprProgramsATC/~3/8Nf01LBdb8c/pennsylvania-governor-talks-up-plan-to-expand-medicaid-his-way
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