Huawei 10-inch MediaPad hands-on (video)

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Sadly, when this gorgeous slab of glass and silicon was unveiled at MWC, Huawei wouldn’t let us put our greasy hands on it — and with good reason, the spectacular panel on the MediaPad 10 is a bit of a fingerprint magnet. But, we’re happy to report that the company trotted out the goods for Pepcom’s event at CTIA. We took the device for a pretty thorough spin and, despite being saddled with software still in the development stage, came away thoroughly impressed. The 10-inch 1920 x 1200 IPS display is one of the most gorgeous screens to ever grace a tablet. Sure, it’s not quite “new” iPad levels of pixel density, but it certainly puts most of its potential competitors to shame. The primarily aluminum body feels great in the hand, striking a great balance between weight and a premium feel. At only 8.8mm thin it’s no surprise that it comes in at just 13 ounces (roughly), all while packing a 6,600 mAh battery.

The in-house developed 1.5Ghz quad-core K3 Balong CPU inside is given a pretty decent workout by the rough built of Ice Cream Sandwich on board, that was mostly stock but had the sporadic OEM flourish such as different icons and keyboard. Most actions, such as playing back HD video and launching the browser were smooth enough, but we did notice the occasional stutter and pause. We took some time to put it through a few of our standard issue benchmarks, and turned up some mixed results. The 2,696.7ms it took to chug through the SunSpider benchmark left us standing around awkwardly at the Huawei table, while the 2,737 on Quadrant and 30.1 fps in NenaMark 2 were respectable, though not mind-blowing. But, again, we’ll stress that this is still running a development version of the OS. Check out the gallery below and the video after the break for a full tour.

Joseph Volpe contributed to this post.

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Continue reading Huawei 10-inch MediaPad hands-on (video)

Huawei 10-inch MediaPad hands-on (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 08 May 2012 20:57:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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What earnings reports have revealed about ads

Here are highlights of recent quarterly earnings reports from selected Internet and media companies and what they say about the state of spending on advertising:

April 12: Google Inc. says its revenue, after subtracting ad commissions, totaled $8.14 billion in the first quarter. Analysts were expecting revenue of $8.09 billion on this basis. Google‘s revenue was helped by a 39 percent increase in “paid clicks,” but the prices of its search-driven text ads continued to decline. The so-called “cost-per-click” for these ads declined 12 percent from the same time a year earlier.

April 16: Gannett Co. reports a 25 percent drop in first-quarter net income, as advertising in its newspapers continued to decline. Broadcasting revenue rose, helped by advertising related to autos, the Super Bowl and political campaigns.

April 17: Yahoo Inc. says that after subtracting commissions paid to its advertising partners, revenue was $1.08 billion in the first quarter, up slightly from last year. It marked the first time since the third quarter of 2008 that Yahoo’s quarterly net revenue has increased from the previous year.

Omnicom Group Inc., which owns marketing agencies, says its domestic revenue climbed 4 percent in the latest quarter, while international revenue increased nearly 6 percent.

April 19: Microsoft Corp. says it reduced losses in its online services division, which includes the ad-supported Bing search engine. The division’s operating loss was $479 million, compared with $776 million a year ago. The division had $707 million in revenue, up 6 percent from $667 million.

The New York Times Co. says print and digital advertising revenue declined amid what CEO Arthur Sulzberger Jr. called “the uneven U.S. economic environment and uncertain global conditions.” Advertising revenue fell 8 percent to $237.9 million, from $258.9 million a year ago.

April 25: The McClatchy Co. reports a slightly larger net loss due to declining advertising revenue. Meanwhile, compensation and other costs at the nation’s third-largest newspaper company fell while digital advertising increased.

April 26: The Interpublic Group of Companies Inc., one of the world’s largest advertising agency conglomerates, says revenue rose 2 percent to $1.51 billion, beating the $1.49 billion expected by analysts.

Time Warner Cable Inc. says advertising revenue grew 7 percent to $211 million in the quarter.

Online games company Zynga Inc. says revenue from advertising more than doubled to $28.2 million, from $13 million a year earlier.

April 27: WPP Group PLC, another owner of ad agencies, says revenue grew 4 percent after excluding acquisitions and changes in currency exchange rates.

May 1: CBS Corp. says advertising revenue grew 5 percent to $2.4 billion.

May 2: Time Warner Inc. says advertising revenue at its cable TV networks grew 6 percent, or $64 million, on stronger rates and better timing of March Madness basketball games. Ad revenue at the Time Inc. magazine business fell 5 percent, or $19 million.

Comcast Corp. says its NBCUniversal cable TV networks saw a 6 percent increase in advertising revenue. It did not break out ad revenue figures for the NBC broadcast network and stations, but says revenue grew from higher ratings and from carrying the Super Bowl, which was on Fox last year. Ad revenue at Comcast’s cable-distribution division grew 5 percent.

May 3: Viacom Inc., owner of MTV, Nickelodeon and Comedy Central, says domestic advertising revenue increased 1 percent, while worldwide ad revenue was flat at $1.07 billion.

May 4: The Washington Post Co. says print advertising at its namesake newspaper fell 17 percent to $53 million. The division’s online revenue, primarily from the Post’s website and Slate magazine, fell 7 percent to $24 million. That reflects an 11 percent decline in display online advertising revenue in the unit and a 1 percent decline in online classified ad revenue at the Post’s website.

Clear Channel Outdoor Holdings Inc. says revenue was virtually flat at $651 million.

Coming up:

Tuesday: The Walt Disney Co., Discovery Communications Inc.

Wednesday: AOL Inc.

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Lenovo ThinkPad USB 3.0 dock lends its ports to your deprived laptop via DisplayLink, available May 15th for $180

Lenovo ThinkPad USB 3.0 dock lends its ports to your deprived laptop via DisplayLink, available May 15th for $180We’ve all been there. When you run into a scenario where your kit is one USB port short of an ideal workflow. Fret not, the ThinkPad USB 3.0 dock from Lenovo will provide help with said issue when it arrives later this month. Powered by DisplayLink’s DL-3900 graphics chip, the peripheral adds five of the aforementioned USB ports, dual DVI jacks for implementing multiple displays and both gigabit Ethernet and audio connections. Not too shabby for an expansion set that connects to your chosen workhorse over a single USB 3.0 cable. Looking to take the leap? You’ll have to wait a few days, but you can snag one from retailers around the globe for $179.99 beginning May 15th.

Continue reading Lenovo ThinkPad USB 3.0 dock lends its ports to your deprived laptop via DisplayLink, available May 15th for $180

Lenovo ThinkPad USB 3.0 dock lends its ports to your deprived laptop via DisplayLink, available May 15th for $180 originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 08 May 2012 15:48:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Personal Injury Attorney Fees ? How Much Does A Lawyer Cost …

Whenever you need a lawyer, an important part of the choice is how and how much the lawyer is to be paid.?Much legal work is done by lawyers based on an hourly charge or based on a set fee for a specific project.?Divorce, wills and estate planning, and criminal defense are examples of lawyer work that is paid for this way.?However, when the need for a lawyer is brought about by a personal injury or wrongful death, most of this legal work is done on a contingent fee agreement.?A contingent fee agreement simply means that the lawyer and law firm are paid only if and when there is a successful recovery of money damages. The amount paid is almost always a percentage of the settlement amount collected.?Massachusetts requires that all contingent fee agreements are put in writing and signed by both the client and the lawyer.

In personal injury and wrongful death cases, the most frequent fee percentages charged are 25%, 33 1/3% and 40% depending on the type of case and difficulty involved.?Some specific types of personal injury cases, such as medical malpractice cases and cases against the United States, have limits on the percentage that can be charged.?In medical malpractice cases, a law limits the percentage to be charged based on a sliding scale of the amount collected.?As the recovery increases, the maximum fee percentage that can be charged decreases.?In cases for personal injury or wrongful death against the United States, the maximum fee that can be charged is 25%.

Aside from fee percentage, every attorney fee agreement should cover the question of the expenses of the case.?Personal injury and wrongful death cases can be very expensive with costs for experts, deposition and court transcripts, court filings, medical records and reports.?These costs must be paid as the case progresses and cannot wait until a recovery of money damages.

Even with a contingent fee agreement, lawyers are permitted to ask clients to pay these expenses along the way and some even ask clients to provide advance payment for these costs.?However, firms such as ours generally pay these litigation costs without expecting reimbursement from a client except from the final recovery.?When confronted with a serious personal injury or wrongful death, most families would be hard pressed to find extra funds to pay the cost of bringing a case. We feel that proper preparation of a case, such as hiring the right expert or taking a deposition, should not depend on our client?s ability to pay.

If you or a family member have questions regarding a contingent fee case, our partners are happy to consult with you.?Call us at 617 542-1000 or e-mail us at info@sugarman.com.

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GOP takes turn crafting women anti-abuse bill

(AP) ? House Republicans on Tuesday advanced their own version of an election-year bill to protect women from violence.

The House Judiciary Committee voted 17-15 along party lines to renew the 1994 Violence Against Women Act that protects abused women and which expired last year. The Democratic-controlled Senate passed a conflicting version last month.

The law historically has enjoyed bipartisan support. But this year, with the presidency and congressional majorities at stake and female voters a pivotal constituency, it’s become the latest vehicle for gender politicking over an issue on which there’s been little debate in less-polarized years.

Republicans say they want to tighten provisions in the Senate bill that would protect abused immigrants ? as well as taxpayer money doled out under the law.

Democrats say any effort to change the Senate version is just the latest shot in what they say is the GOP’s “war against women.”

“House Republicans are continuing their war on women by holding VAWA, Violence Against Women Act, hostage to their rigid right-wing ideology,” Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., said.

“Some in Congress,” retorted House Judiciary Committee Chairman Lamar Smith, R-Texas, “are trying to use violence against women as a political prop.”

Congress passed the Violence Against Women Act in 1994 to provide legal assistance to abuse victims, enforce protection orders, pay for transitional housing aid and establish youth protection programs. Lawmakers of both parties reauthorized it in 2000 and 2005. The law expired last year.

In the Senate this year, Democrats proposed expanding it to specifically protect gays, lesbians and transsexuals in a move designed in part to prod Republicans into opposing the overall bill. Republicans bristled, saying the law already protects those groups. They objected to additional provisions protecting Native Americans and immigrants. Nonetheless, the Senate voted 68-31 to pass its five-year reauthorization.

House Republicans immediately started writing their own version. It came before the Judiciary Committee on Tuesday amid protests from women’s groups that called it elitist and anti-victim, among other names. The measure would authorize $599.8 million in federal funding this fiscal year, compared with the Senate version’s $659.3 million. The last VAWA act authorized about $796 million.

Sponsored by Rep. Sandy Adams. R-Fla., a long-ago domestic violence victim, the House bill proposes to crack down on fraud and mismanagement of the taxpayer money dispersed under the law. In rare bipartisan fashion, the committee agreed to a Democratic amendment to strike time limits within which the violence must be reported.

But other differences remained. The most pitched discussion centered on the Republicans’ proposals for protecting abused illegal immigrants and preventing the law from being fraudulently used to secure citizenship or residency.

Immigration laws allow illegal and legal immigrants on temporary visas to apply to cancel their deportation if they have been victims of crime, including battering or extreme cruelty by a U.S. citizen or permanent resident and been in the country for three years. The House version grants temporary legal status ? so-called U visas ? to abused illegal immigrants only if they assist in the investigation and prosecution of their assailants.

“It doesn’t provide them with permanent residency or a path to citizenship,” Smith said. “That should never have been a goal of the U visa program and is not necessary to provide illegal immigrants with an incentive to cooperate with law enforcement officials.”

The House bill also requires the Homeland Security Department to “consider all credible evidence,” including information from the alleged abuser.

Democrats and victims’ rights groups said that violates confidentiality requirements in the existing law that are designed to protect victims. Republicans say the provision is intended to give the government as much information as possible.

“This bill is a direct roll back of VAWA laws,” said Rocio Mollina of the National Immigrant Women’s Advocacy Project at American University. “It fails to protect victims that are vulnerable, that are too traumatized, too scared to report and who face barriers.”

Even here, there’s a personal-political element to the dispute. The determination of whether battered immigrants can have independent legal resident status are made at an immigration office in St. Albans, Vt., home state of the Senate bill’s Democratic author, Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy. The Adams bill would give facilities in other states, such as California and Texas, the same roles.

Associated Press

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Libertarians nominate ex-Governor Gary Johnson for president (reuters)

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Overnight Video: Dream From ‘The Glide’ (Little green footballs)

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VAIO T13 Ultrabook could be coming with Ivy Bridge, according to Sony’s German site

VAIO T13 Ultrabook could be coming with Ivy Bridge, according to Sony's German site

If Sony’s German site is to be believed, then it’s safe to say the outfit’s had a change of heart recently. According to a revealing spec sheet on the website, there’s now a T13 Ultrabook model with one of Intel’s latest chips on board. Just last week, Sony announced the Euro-bound T13 would be sporting a last-gen Core i3-2367M CPU, but the recent finding shows an i5-3317U variant (you know, the one on Sammy’s Series 9) could be in the works. Still, it’s unknown whether this Ivy Bridge-packing VAIO would replace its Sandy Bridge sibling or if it’s just going to be a complete different offering. We’ll have to wait and see.

VAIO T13 Ultrabook could be coming with Ivy Bridge, according to Sony’s German site originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 07 May 2012 11:32:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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RefreshSF: San Franciscans Bring Startup Approach To Homeless

SAN FRANCISCO — On the foggy streets of San Francisco, tech superstars and the homeless can be hard to tell apart in their identical hoodies. But there’s a key difference: smartphones and cash in some pockets, neither in others.

These two crowds will soon find themselves even closer together when Twitter moves its headquarters into one of the city’s poorest areas later this year, drawing attention to the divide between the tech haves and have-nots that crops up whenever wealthy companies rub shoulders with communities that haven’t seen the benefits of the latest boom.

Still, optimism reigns in San Francisco, especially when it comes to the promise of technology to improve people’s lives.

Recently, a crowd of such optimists came together for a “hackathon,” a weekend of intense work and little sleep, as part of a nonprofit project called Creative Currency. Engineers and entrepreneurs joined with designers and neighborhood advocates to figure out how technology could help people in the Tenderloin and Mid-Market areas of the city who don’t have roofs over their heads, much less web browsers.

“All people need dignity, right? And the base of dignity is being able to recognize and feel like you’re part of humanity,” said Aynne Valencia, a San Francisco designer who has worked for some of the biggest tech companies.

Over the weekend, Valencia and a team of 19 others designed a mobile wash station that people could use to take showers and launder their clothes. The project, RefreshSF, would be funded through small donations made via text message to pay not just for the wash stations themselves but to employ attendants who would ensure the stations didn’t suffer the same foul-smelling fate of so many San Francisco public restrooms.

Young urban professionals risk coming across as patronizing when they come into neighborhoods they might otherwise shun _and they also risk failure if they don’t understand how the neighborhood works.

To pre-empt that problem, Creative Currency organizers prior to the hackathon surveyed about 20 community organizations, 155 residents and 37 local businesses to gauge the neighborhood’s needs.

“It was actually really great to be reached out to,” said Kristen Growney Yamamoto, co-executive director of the Glide Foundation, one of the city’s largest providers of homeless services.

Another proposal, Bridge, intends to solve what Yamamoto and others described as one of the most maddening problems faced by San Francisco’s homeless. To get a bed for the night, shelter-seekers must line up early in the morning to get their names entered in the city’s reservation system. Standing in line can take hours. Even then, a spot isn’t guaranteed ? most don’t find out until early evening whether they have a place to sleep.

Barry Roeder, a San Francisco management consultant, wants to eliminate the lines by creating a neighborhood-wide network of touch-screen kiosks where people could make and check reservations themselves. The system could also notify people by text message if they received a bed ? the Creative Currency survey found that while few residents have smartphones, about 60 percent have access to some kind of cell phone.

If Bridge works as hoped, the idea is that by freeing up people’s time, they’d have more chance to do things to help themselves, such as look for work.

Before that can happen, Roeder acknowledges several challenges would have to be overcome.

“The nightmare that comes to mind is a busted ATM that’s been graffitied and peed on,” he said. Even tougher, said Yamamoto, would be the labor involved in grafting the system onto the city’s existing archaic reservation network or building a new one from scratch.

Jake Levitas, research director at the Gray Area Foundation For The Arts, the San Francisco digital arts nonprofit that conceived Creative Currency, believes that such obstacles are best surmounted by applying the hacker mindset to community issues.

In Silicon Valley-speak, the word “hacker” is more often used to describe someone who comes up with a clever solution to a frustrating problem rather than someone who’s committing cybercrimes. Levitas says hackers in the positive sense of the term start from the premise that problems are solvable and then work quickly and cheaply to solve them, learning from their mistakes and trying again ? what the startup world refers to as “iterating.”

In a sense, he said he hopes the same mentality that has helped once-small startups to challenge the dominance of companies like Microsoft can make strides against a seemingly intractable problem like homelessness.

“I don’t think anybody who comes to our events thinks that they’re going to solve poverty in a weekend,” Levitas said. “But I think they do think they can do something that contributes.”

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Video: Al-Qaida Plot Disrupted Well Before It Threatened America…

NBC News is reporting U.S. officials have confirmed international security professionals working with the U.S. have recovered an explosive device intended to destroy a U.S. airliner, and that no Americans were ever at risk. With CNBC’s Tyler Mathisen.

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