Friday, May 31, 2013

Windows 8.1: Little Fixes, Same Big Ideas (Oh, and a Start Button)

Windows 8.1: Little Fixes, Same Big Ideas (Oh, and a Start Button)

The good news: If you liked Windows 8, its first major update is going fix a ton of the little things that bothered you. The bad news: You might not like Windows 8. And there's nothing here that will change that. At least there's a Start button!

Microsoft today is giving a sneak peak at Windows 8.1, previously known as Windows Blue. And while it may not be the drastic walkback of the Metro design theory you were hoping for, there's plenty here to like. Starting with:

The Start Button

Yes, the rumors are true. It's back. It'll be there by default, in both desktop mode and in your lovely tiled rubric. See? There it is, right there in the lower lefthand corner:

Windows 8.1: Little Fixes, Same Big Ideas (Oh, and a Start Button)

Missed you, friend! It won't always be immediately visible in whatever app you're using, but you're never more than a mouse-over away from the Start screen. It's not quite the robust Start menu people were clamoring for, but it's... uh... a start.

Another win for die-hards: You can boot directly into desktop mode now. So long, flat design! Or, if you prefer a best-of-both-worlds approach, you can display your tiles over the traditional desktop background. Baby steps.

All About You

The Start button (rightly) is going to garner the most attention, but Windows 8.1 also features a bevy of smaller tweaks that let you better configure your PC to your needs. Much of this is aesthetic; you've got more control over your Start screen background, make your Lock screen a slideshow of pictures if you want to turn Surface into the world's most expensive digital picture frame, and uninstall, resize, or move apps in groups instead of one at a time.

Windows 8.1: Little Fixes, Same Big Ideas (Oh, and a Start Button)

There's less presumption in Windows 8.1, too. New apps don't automatically wind up on your Start screen; they instead get shimmied off to an apps view, from which you can choose where and how to pin it. Likewise, you can now open photos from Mail, SkyDrive, or the Camera app to edit them.

Eye on the SkyDrive

Microsoft's also using Windows 8.1 to give SkyDrive a major boost; it's more deeply integrated than ever before, storing all of your settings and apps automatically to make switching from PC to PC a seamless experience.

Windows 8.1: Little Fixes, Same Big Ideas (Oh, and a Start Button)

You can also save individual files directly to SkyDrive from Windows 8.1, while accessing any of your cloud-based docs from the SkyDrive app, even when offline.

SkyDrive may not get as much hype as the iClouds and Google Drives of the world, but it's a terrific service that deserves the spotlight. It's also, incidentally, Microsoft's key to being a fully integrated?and standalone?ecosystem.

Betting on Bing

Bing is not perfect. In fact, by many measures, it's not even particularly good. But it's going to be everywhere in Windows 8.1, and that may not be the worst thing. By default, the Search charm will provide a global search that spans both the web and your SkyDrive files, apps, and suggested courses of action, all powered by the anti-Google.

Windows 8.1: Little Fixes, Same Big Ideas (Oh, and a Start Button)

Sounds great in theory, and Bing can only get better as more people use it to feed its algorithms. But for much of the Windows 8.1 search experience, you won't have Google as an option. That's going to be problematic for some.

A Fresh Start

The most exciting thing about Windows 8.1 is that it's a clear indication that Microsoft is pushing forward with Metro, not pulling away. Yes, the Start button is a (probably necessary) concession. But it's the only one. None of the rest of these changes give even the slightest whiff of retreat. Good for them.

We'll be able to get a closer look at Windows 8.1's features starting on June 26th; it'll be available as a free update later this year for existing Windows users. Which gives you plenty of time to get comfy with the idea that those tiles aren't going anywhere any time soon. Nor should they.

Source: http://gizmodo.com/windows-8-1-first-look-little-fixes-same-big-ideas-510444639

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Broncos receivers: Manning's arm getting stronger

TebowGetty Images

The news around Tim Tebow has been quiet since he was cut by the Jets, but it?s been widely assumed that Tebow is still hoping to catch on with some NFL team. The people advising Tebow, however, may have come to the conclusion that there simply isn?t an NFL team willing to give him a shot.

David Fleming writes in ESPN the Magazine that members of Tebow?s camp are privately admitting that his NFL run is probably over.

Although Tebow did have some success as the Broncos? starting quarterback, leading Denver to a playoff win after the 2011 season, Fleming quotes an unnamed scout as saying that even during his best run with the Broncos, the work he put on tape did nothing for NFL personnel people.

?He?s not a quarterback,? the scout said. ?When you look at his run two years ago, when you watch the tape and break it down, he wasn?t really doing anything that impressive. He?s a tough guy, a great leader, a great person. But he isn?t a good enough quarterback to have all the distractions that come with him.?

Among the problems NFL teams have identified about Tebow, according to the report, are that he has a hard time remembering plays, he didn?t run the offense well and got the Broncos flagged for delay of game too often, he struggled to read defenses and he didn?t have the self-awareness to know what he wasn?t doing well and work on improving those issues.

There?s also, obviously, the fundamental issue of passing accuracy: Tebow?s career completion rate of 47.9 percent is way too low, and Fleming describes a scene in Broncos practice in which coach John Fox was aghast to see Tebow throw a pass so badly that it landed on the ground far in front of the intended receiver?s feet.

Add it all up, and no matter how exciting a season he had with the Broncos in 2011, Tebow just doesn?t look like an NFL quarterback. He and the people around him may be coming around to accepting that.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/05/30/broncos-receivers-say-peyton-mannings-arm-is-stronger/related/

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How To Uncouple Insurance Policies In Divorce | Bankrate.com

insurance

While most divorcing couples focus on the delicate and often difficult issues of child custody and dividing assets, breaking up can be hard to do in terms of your insurance policies, too. Whether the policies are in place for protection or as an investment, divorcing spouses need to review them in the context of their new financial circumstances.

Types of insurance to consider in a divorce

  • Life insurance.
  • Health insurance.
  • Car and home insurance.
  • Long-term care insurance.
  • Disability insurance.

Life insurance

Your first step should be to check the beneficiaries on your life insurance, whether you have term or permanent policies.

"People sometimes forget the existence of their life insurance policies, yet often the amount of money involved is higher than their other assets," says Howard Hook, a CFP professional and accountant with Access Wealth Planning LLC in Roseland, N.J. "If you forget to change the beneficiary of your policy and you pass away, your ex-spouse could get the money instead of your new spouse."

Melody Juge, managing director of Life Income Management in Flat Rock, N.C., says splitting spouses should negotiate ownership of life insurance policies as part of the divorce settlement.

"If your spouse has an insurance policy that you're depending on to take care of you and your kids if he dies, you should have (the) ownership changed to yourself instead of your spouse," says Juge. "If not, your spouse could change the beneficiary or simply stop paying the premiums."

Hook says some divorcing spouses may need a new life insurance policy to ensure that money for child support or alimony would still be available if their ex passes away.

"Life insurance needs to be viewed in the context of the long-term financial obligations of each spouse," says Cathy Seeber, principal and senior financial adviser for Wescott Financial Advisory Group LLC in Philadelphia. "It should be in place to pay alimony, to pay off a mortgage, to pay for college for the kids or for the care of the couple's parents."

Seeber says the cash value of any permanent life insurance policies should be considered along with other assets during a divorce settlement.

Health insurance

Many couples share health insurance under one spouse's employee benefits package; a divorce will require a policy change.

When you work and have previously been covered by your spouse's company, you can generally obtain health insurance through your own employer after a divorce.

Also, the federal law known as the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act, or COBRA, allows a person going through a divorce to stay on a spouse's group policy for a limited time. But you'd have to pay the full premium yourself.

"Spouses are entitled to 36 months of COBRA coverage, but extending your health insurance coverage that way can be costly," says Seeber. At the same time, "It's extremely important not to have a gap in your health insurance coverage, particularly if you have a medical issue or need mental health services."

Seeber says spouses who are not employed should negotiate during the divorce process to have their COBRA premiums paid by their ex and possibly to have additional money set aside for future insurance premiums, particularly if the unemployed spouse has been a stay-at-home parent and may face difficulty getting work.

"You also need to determine which spouse will provide your children's health insurance policy," says Hook.

Home and car insurance

Liability insurance policies for your home and car are particularly important to maintain during and after a divorce.

"Make sure your home insurance coverage, including liability insurance, is still in place even if you have moved out in anticipation of a divorce," says Hook. "If your spouse decides to eliminate liability coverage but your name is still on the deed, then you're still liable if anything happens to someone at the property."

Divorcing spouses should immediately notify their insurance companies if an asset such as a car or home changes ownership, Seeber says.

"You also need to be aware that you may lose discounts for bundling your car and home insurance with one company, insuring multiple cars, and even just for being married," she says.

"Look into how your insurance premiums may change, and incorporate that information into your estimated expenses before you finalize your settlement."

Long-term care insurance

Hook says long-term care insurance policies are individual insurance policies, so there would not be much impact from a divorce. But some insurance companies offer a discount for covering a married couple, and that would be eliminated after a split, he says.

Premiums for long-term care insurance should be estimated as part of your expenses during the divorce settlement. Hook suggests that divorcing spouses in their 50s who don't have long-term care coverage should be sure to purchase some.

"Long-term care insurance is especially important when you're single because you may not have anyone to take care of you, and you'll have to pay for whatever care you need from your own assets," says Hook.

Disability insurance

Hook says people who are divorcing should be sure they have disability insurance because a disability can be harder to handle if you're single.

"The lack of a second income or someone to help you means that a disability will have a greater impact on a single person than on a married person," says Hook.

You can get disability insurance through your employer or privately, but you must currently have an income in order to qualify.

Typically, disability insurance policies pay only 60 percent to 70 percent of a person's income, so if a divorced spouse paying alimony becomes disabled and must collect benefits, the other ex may see his or her alimony reduced. Juge recommends having a provision written into a divorce settlement that addresses what will happen with alimony payments in case of a disability.

Source: http://www.bankrate.com/finance/insurance/uncouple-insurance-policies-divorce.aspx

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Thursday, May 30, 2013

Freedom Sleeve Rocket (FreedomPop)


If you own an iPod touch, then you know it's just about as useful as your nearest Wi-Fi connection. And chances are you lose that connection whenever you leave the house. FreedomPop is looking to change that with the Freedom Sleeve Rocket, which is a case for your fourth-generation iPod touch that gets it online for free. Yes, you read that correctly. A basic plan from FreedomPop comes with 500MB of free data per month, along with a number of simple opportunities to earn more. As long as you fall within the limited coverage area, the $99 Freedom Sleeve Rocket is a great option for free Wi-Fi, but a hotspot?like the Freedom Spot Overdrive Pro?costs less up front and is even more versatile.

Pricing, Plans, and Coverage
FreedomPop offers three different plans for the Freedom Sleeve Rocket: Basic, Casual, and Premiere. The Basic plan is free, and gets you 500MB of data every month. After that, extra data costs $0.02 per 1MB (which works out to $20 per 1GB).

Paid plans are inexpensive. The Casual plan costs $17.99 per month and gets you 2GB of data. After that, additional data costs $0.01 per 1MB (or $10 per 1GB). The Premiere plan, meanwhile, costs $28.99 for 4GB of data, with the same $0.01 charge for each additional megabyte you go over. So while these plans may not be free, they're a lot cheaper than what you'll pay for similar amounts of data on AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile, and Verizon. On the other hand, those carriers also offer access to networks with much faster speeds.

But you're probably here for the free data. And 500MB per month is good for checking your email on the go and some light Web browsing, but it probably isn't going to get you much further than that. Luckily, FreedomPop has a number of ways for you to earn more. For starters, you get an additional 50MB of data for every friend you refer, up to 1GB. You can also share or request data from friends. Then there are a number of actions and offers you can complete to earn more data. Actions include downloading the FreedomPop smartphone app or installing the FreedomPop toolbar on your computer, each of which earns you an additional 200MB of data. Offers range from surveys to downloading and installing various programs, which can get you anywhere from an additional 3MB to 3GB of data.

That's still probably not enough data if you want to do things like stream music and video. But no finite data plan is ideal if you plan to do a lot of streaming. If that's the case, you're better off with an unlimited plan from Clear or Virgin Mobile. Both carriers will get you unlimited 4G WiMAX data on the same network as FreedomPop for as little as $34.99 per month.

Keep in mind that FreedomPop currently uses Clearwire's 4G WiMAX network, which is somewhat limited. Be sure to check out Clear's 4G coverage map to see if service is available where you live and where you plan to travel. FreedomPop plans to include support for Sprint's slowly expanding 4G LTE network in the future, but the Freedom Sleeve will not support it; you'll still be able to get WiMAX, but if you want LTE, you'll have to get a new device.

Design and Setup
The Freedom Sleeve Rocket is a case designed to fit the fourth-generation iPod touch. It'll also fit the third-generation touch, but you're out of luck if you've got a shiny new fifth-gen model. It's a snap-on case, made of black rubberized plastic with a FreedomPop logo on the back, and gray on the sides. At 4.4 by 2.4 by 0.6 inches (HWD) and 2.4 ounces, it adds a considerable amount of bulk to the svelte iPod touch.

There's a cutout for the camera sensor on the back, and buttons that bump out so you can control the volume and power easily. A power port is on the bottom, but it doesn't obscure the power port on your iPod touch; you can charge both devices with their respective chargers at the same time. The only control on the case itself is a Power button on the upper right corner. Two status lights above it tell you when the case is turned on, and when it is connected to 4G.

And although the Freedom Sleeve comes in the form of a case, it's really more of a hotspot masquerading as one. That means that when you turn it on you just connect your iPod touch to it as you would with any other Wi-Fi network. And in addition to your iPod touch, you can connect up to 7 additional devices to the Sleeve.

Performance
I tested the Freedom Sleeve with a fourth-generation iPod touch. The case fit fine, and I had no trouble connecting to 4G in New York City. It takes about a minute for the Rocket to power on and report a signal. Once it was up and running it only took me a few seconds to connect.

Data speeds are closer to 3G than they are to 4G. The Sleeve turned in an average of 3Mbps down, but struggled to hit even 0.1Mbps up, which is consistent with what we saw on the FreedomPop Overdrive Pro. And like the Overdrive Pro, I don't see a huge issue with these speeds. Since you only get a limited amount of data, you don't want to inadvertently blaze through it. Additionally, these downlink speeds should still be fast enough for pretty much anything you'll need to do. Just make sure to stay charged. The Freedom Sleeve's 1,450mAh was good for a decent 4 hours and 37 minutes of streaming.

Conclusions
If you live within the coverage area, and don't plan to travel much outside of it, the Freedom Sleeve Rocket is a solid option for getting your iPod touch online for free, or for less than what you'll pay with any of the major carriers. But you're still probably better off with a hotspot from FreedomPop like the Freedom Spot Photon?or the Overdrive Pro. Both of these work just like the Freedom Sleeve, but don't add any bulk to your device. And the Overdrive Pro supports 3G data on Sprint, though it costs $3.99 per month.

And if you want unlimited data, be sure check out the Clear Spot Voyager?and the Overdrive Pro 3G/4G?from Virgin Mobile. They perform similarly to the Freedom Sleeve, but come with unlimited data plans for as low as $34.99 per month.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/RdHK7AF94vE/0,2817,2419701,00.asp

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Biologists take snapshot of fleeting protein process

May 30, 2013 ? Structural biologists from Rice University and Baylor College of Medicine (BCM) have captured the first three-dimensional crystalline snapshot of a critical but fleeting process that takes place thousands of times per second in each human cell. The research appears online today in the journal Cell Reports and could prove useful in the study of cancer and other diseases.

The biological "freeze-frame" shows the initial step in the formation of actin, a sturdy strand-like filament that is vital for humans. Actin filaments help cells maintain their shape. The filaments, which are called F-actin, also play key roles in muscle contraction, cell division and other critical processes.

"One of the major distinctions between cancerous cells and healthy cells is their shape," said study co-author Jianpeng Ma, professor of bioengineering at Rice and the Lodwick T. Bolin Professor of Biochemistry at BCM. "There is a correlation between healthy shape and well-regulated cell growth, and cancer cells are often ugly and ill-shaped compared to healthy cells."

F-actin was discovered in 1887, but despite the more than 18,000 actin-related studies in scientific literature, biologists have struggled to unlock some of its secrets. For example, F-actin is a polymer made of many smaller proteins called monomers. These building blocks, which are called G-actin, self-assemble end to end to form F-actin. But the self-assembly process is so efficient that scientists have been unable to see what happens when the first two or three monomers come together to form the nucleus of a filament. The F-actin filaments inside cells are constantly being built, torn apart and rebuilt.

"Nucleation is critical for this continual building and rebuilding," said BCM biochemist and study co-author Qinghua Wang. "For healthy cells, nucleation is the starting place for robust shape. For unhealthy cells, like cancer, nucleation processes may play a crucial role in unregulated growth. That's one reason we want to better understand nucleation."

In 2008, Ma and Wang asked Xiaorui Chen, a graduate student in BCM's Structural and Computational Biology and Molecular Biophysics program, to undertake the task of using x-ray crystallography to determine the structure of the actin nucleus. Her initial attempts failed, but the team finally hit upon the winning idea of creating two mutant versions of G-actin that could nucleate but not polymerize.

Native G-actin binds with one neighbor on top and one on bottom, and this top-bottom, end-to-end binding pattern is the key to forming long F-actin polymers. To foster nucleation without polymerization, Chen created two mutant versions of G-actin. One mutant could bind normally on top but not on bottom, and the other could bind normally on bottom but not on top.

"This dual-mutant strategy was the key," said Chen, who is now a postdoctoral researcher at BCM. "After that, we had to overcome problems related to forming and growing the crystal samples needed for crystallography."

Chen used a two-stage process to prepare the crystals. She first used high levels of super-saturation to spur initial crystal formation and then used a process called seeding to transfer the newly formed crystals to another medium where they could grow large enough for examination.

Once the crystals were prepared, they were analyzed with x-ray diffraction, which revealed the atomic arrangement of each atom in the nucleated, dual-mutant pair.

"We believe this dual-mutant arrangement reveals the most critical contacts involved in nucleation," Ma said. "For the first time, we are able to see how actin nucleation begins."

Additional co-authors include Fengyun Ni of both Rice and BCM, Xia Tian of BCM and Elena Kondrashkina of Northwestern University. The research was supported by the National Institutes of Health, the Gillson-Longenbaugh Foundation, the National Science Foundation, the Welch Foundation, the Department of Energy and the Michigan Economic Development Corp.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_environment/~3/k-K_rGECRCw/130530170046.htm

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Would-be Chicago backpack bomber to be sentenced

FILE - This Sept. 21, 2010 file photo shows Sluggers Sports Bar and Grill near Wrigley Field, background, before a Chicago Cubs baseball game in Chicago. On Thursday, May 30, 2013, Sami Samir Hassoun, a Lebanese immigrant, is scheduled to be sentenced at federal court in Chicago for placing a backpack he thought held a bomb outside the bar in September 2010. Prosecutors want a 30-year prison sentence for the 25-year-old, who pleaded guilty to weapons charges last year. The defense filing argues Hassoun deserves no more than 20 years, in part because they contend he was egged on by an FBI informant to concoct the bombing scheme. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast, File)

FILE - This Sept. 21, 2010 file photo shows Sluggers Sports Bar and Grill near Wrigley Field, background, before a Chicago Cubs baseball game in Chicago. On Thursday, May 30, 2013, Sami Samir Hassoun, a Lebanese immigrant, is scheduled to be sentenced at federal court in Chicago for placing a backpack he thought held a bomb outside the bar in September 2010. Prosecutors want a 30-year prison sentence for the 25-year-old, who pleaded guilty to weapons charges last year. The defense filing argues Hassoun deserves no more than 20 years, in part because they contend he was egged on by an FBI informant to concoct the bombing scheme. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast, File)

(AP) ? The defense depicts Sami Samir Hassoun as a uniquely gullible youth sucked into a terrorist plot during an alcohol-addled stretch of his life by an informant eager to please his FBI handlers.

Prosecutors, though, say the 25-year-old Lebanese immigrant showed enthusiasm and initiative, including by selecting a crowded street near Chicago's Wrigley Field as the place to plant a backpack he believed held a real bomb.

A federal judge will consider those competing portraits Thursday at Hassoun's sentencing hearing in Chicago.

The one-time bakery worker pleaded guilty last year to two explosives charges. As part of his plea deal with the government, he faces between 20 and 30 years in prison.

The Chicago man's sentencing comes in the wake of the Boston Marathon bombing ? a deadly attack that prosecutors could point to as an example of the chaos Hassoun had allegedly hoped to wreak.

At Thursday's hearing, government attorneys planned to display the fake bomb that undercover agents gave to Hassoun on a September weekend in 2010. It's a paint can fitted with blasting caps and a timer.

They also intend to play a surveillance video of Hassoun dropping the device into a trash bin near the Chicago Cubs' baseball stadium. FBI agents arrested him moments later.

Before Thursday's sentencing, Hassoun apologized in a seven-page letter to his sentencing judge, Robert Gettleman. He also insisted he has worked at becoming a better person, including by doing yoga in jail.

Hassoun, who was born in Beirut, also blamed his actions in part on trauma he said stayed with him since his childhood; he was living in Ivory Coast when bloody civil strife broke out in that African nation.

To dampen his emotional pain, he wrote and he drank alcohol "all day, every day" for months before the would-be attack. He favored whole bottles of Johnnie Walker Black, he wrote.

The multilingual Hassoun immigrated with his parents and a younger brother to the U.S. in the late 2000s and once aspired to become a doctor, his attorneys and relatives have said.

In a recent presentencing filing, the defense suggested investigators may have entrapped Hassoun ? arguing the paid informant egged Hassoun on to acquiesce to ever-more ominous-sounding plots.

Hassoun did waffle about his plans, allegedly talking about profiting monetarily and then broaching the idea of poisoning Lake Michigan or assassinating then-Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley, prosecutors have said.

But far from being led on, prosecutors say, Hassoun himself concluded that maximum damage could be inflicted by orchestrating a blast next to the popular Sluggers World Class Sports Bar, just steps from Wrigley Field.

"He selected the day and time at which to strike ? midnight on a Saturday night ? to maximize the number of prospective casualties," prosecutors said. He walked away expecting "chaos and carnage."

Undercover agents also repeatedly asked Hassoun if he wanted to back out, telling him there would be no shame in doing so. But he repeated declined, saying he wanted to press ahead, government filings say.

Another point of contention is motive.

The defense argues religious fervor did not drive Hassoun, making him less of a long-term threat. But prosecutors say he's dangerous, no matter the motive.

"His alleged lack of religious motivation would not have, in any way, dissipated the death and destruction caused by his actions," the government's presentencing filing says.

Hassoun had an incentive to agree to a plea deal since terrorist suspects rarely prevail at trial. If convicted at trial, he would have faced a maximum life sentence.

___

Follow Michael Tarm at www.twitter.com/mtarm

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-05-30-Chicago%20Bomb%20Arrest/id-9ddcfd9bfdcc48d78cb4e246c9887dca

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Hackers Accessed Sensitive Military Weapons Plans: Report

http://www.kidsmathgamesonline.com/images/pictures/shapes/pentagon.jpgHackers are being accused of accessing design plans for more than two dozen sensitive U.S. weapons systems in a report by the Pentagon?s Defense Science Board [DSB], the Washington Post reports.

According to the Post, the systems were disclosed in a confidential section of a report by the DSB. A public version of the report with the section missing was released in January. According to the Post, the design documents accessed by the hackers included plans for missile defense systems such as the PAC-3 Patriot missile system and the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense [THAAD] system. The hackers also got their hands on plans for the F/A-18 fighter jet, the V-22 Osprey aircraft as well as other aircraft and vessels.

?DoD and its contractor base have already sustained staggering losses of system design information incorporating decades of combat knowledge and experience that provide adversaries insight to technical designs and system use,? the board wrote in the public iteration of the report.

The DSB report did not indicate who was responsible for stealing the designs. However unidentified senior military and defense industry officials familiar with the breaches said most of the blame lies with a burgeoning Chinese espionage campaign targeting the U.S. defense industry. China has historically denied any connection with cyber-attacks, though a recent report from the bipartisan Commission on the Theft of American Intellectual Property said China accounts for as much as 80 percent of U.S. intellectual property theft.

In its report, the DSB declared that after conducting an 18-month study, a DSB task force found that the country cannot be confident its critical information technology systems will work under attack from a ?sophisticated and well-resourced opponent? using cyber capabilities in conjunction with their military and intelligence resources. The Department of Defense needs to respond by building an effective response, according to the report.

?Nearly every conceivable component within DoD is networked,? the report notes. ?These networked systems and components are inextricably linked to the Department?s ability to project military force and the associated mission assurance. Yet, DoD?s networks are built on inherently insecure architectures that are composed of, and increasingly using, foreign parts. While DoD takes great care to secure the use and operation of the ?hardware? of its weapon systems, the same level of resource and attention is not spent on the complex network of information technology (IT) systems that are used to support and operate those weapons or critical IT capabilities embedded within them.?

?You?ve seen significant improvements in Chinese military capabilities through their willingness to spend, their acquisitions of advanced Russian weapons, and from their cyber-espionage campaign,? James A. Lewis, a cyber-policy expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, told the Washington Post. ?Ten years ago, I used to call the PLA [People?s Liberation Army] the world?s largest open-air military museum. I can?t say that now.?

via Hackers Accessed Sensitive Military Weapons Plans: Report | SecurityWeek.Com.

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Source: http://thethreatvector.wordpress.com/2013/05/28/hackers-accessed-sensitive-military-weapons-plans-report/

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Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Mothers now top earners in 4 in 10 US households

WASHINGTON (AP) ? America's working mothers are now the primary breadwinners in a record 40 percent of households with children ? a milestone in the changing face of modern families, up from just 11 percent in 1960.

The findings by the Pew Research Center, released Wednesday, highlight the growing influence of "breadwinner moms" who keep their families afloat financially. While most are headed by single mothers, a growing number are families with married mothers who bring in more income than their husbands.

Demographers say the change is all but irreversible and is likely to bring added attention to child-care policies as well as government safety nets for vulnerable families. Still, the general public is not at all sure that having more working mothers is a good thing.

While roughly 79 percent of Americans reject the notion that women should return to their traditional roles, only 21 percent of those polled said the trend of more mothers of young children working outside the home is a good thing for society, according to the Pew survey.

Roughly 3 in 4 adults said the increasing number of women working for pay has made it harder for parents to raise children.

"This change is just another milestone in the dramatic transformation we have seen in family structure and family dynamics over the past 50 years or so," said Kim Parker, associate director with the Pew Social & Demographic Trends Project. "Women's roles have changed, marriage rates have declined ? the family looks a lot different than it used to. The rise of breadwinner moms highlights the fact that, not only are more mothers balancing work and family these days, but the economic contributions mothers are making to their households have grown immensely."

The trend is being driven mostly by long-term demographic changes, including higher rates of education and labor force participation dating back to the 1960s women's movement. Today, more women than men hold bachelor's degrees, and they make up nearly half ? 47 percent ? of the American workforce.

But recent changes in the economy, too, have played a part. Big job losses in manufacturing and construction, fields that used to provide high pay to a mostly male workforce, have lifted the relative earnings of married women, even among those in mid-level positions such as teachers, nurses or administrators. The jump in working women has been especially prominent among those who are mothers ? from 37 percent in 1968 to 65 percent in 2011 ? reflecting in part increases for those who went looking for jobs to lift sagging family income after the recent recession.

At the same time, marriage rates have fallen to record lows. Forty percent of births now occur out of wedlock, leading to a rise in single-mother households. Many of these mothers are low-income with low education, and more likely to be black or Hispanic.

In all, 13.7 million U.S. households with children under age 18 now include mothers who are the main breadwinners. Of those, 5.1 million, or 37 percent, are married, while 8.6 million, or 63 percent, are single. The income gap between the families is large ? $80,000 in median family income for married couples vs. $23,000 for single mothers.

Both groups of breadwinner moms ? married and unmarried ? have grown sharply.

Among all U.S. households with children, the share of married breadwinner moms has jumped from 4 percent in 1960 to 15 percent in 2011. For single mothers, the share has increased from 7 percent to 25 percent.

Andrew Cherlin, a professor of sociology and public policy at Johns Hopkins University, said that to his surprise public attitudes toward working mothers have changed very little over the years. He predicts the growing numbers will lead to a growing constituency among women in favor of family-friendly work policies such as paid family leave, as well as safety net policies such as food stamps or child care support for single mothers.

"Many of our workplaces and schools still follow a male-breadwinner model, assuming that the wives are at home to take care of child care needs," he said. "Until we realize that the breadwinner-homemaker marriage will never again be the norm, we won't provide working parents with the support they need."

Other findings:

?There is a gender gap on attitudes. About 45 percent of women say children are better off if their mother is at home, and 38 percent say children are just as well off if the mother works. Among men, 57 percent say children are better off if their mother is at home, while 29 percent say they are just as well off if she works.

?The share of married couples in which the wife is more educated than the husband is rising, from 7 percent in 1960 to 23 percent in 2011. Still, the vast majority of couples include spouses with similar educational backgrounds, at 61 percent.

?The number of working wives who make more than their husbands has been increasing more rapidly in recent years. Among recently married couples, including those without children, the share of "breadwinner wives" is roughly 30 percent, compared with 24 percent of all married couples.

The Pew study is based on an analysis of census data as of 2011, the latest available, as well as interviews with 1,003 adults by cellphone or landline from April 25 to 28. The Pew poll has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.5 percentage points.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/mothers-now-top-earners-4-10-us-households-040224109.html

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German railways hope to fight graffiti with thermal imaging drones

DNP German railway operators consider drones to nab graffiti artists

Drones aren't just for war, creating airborne logos or patrolling Aussie beaches. If German railway operators have their way, they'd be used to capture graffiti artists, too. Motivated by the high cost of property damage incurred by spray-painting vandals (around 7.6 million euros / $10 million a year), the Deutsche Bahn will soon begin testing miniature helicopter-style drones in the hopes of identifying those responsible. Each remote-controlled chopper is equipped with an infrared sensor capable of thermal imaging and producing high-resolution photos that would be useful to authorities. The tiny aircraft can also fly up to 150 meters (500 feet) and as fast as 33 mph and would cost about 60,000 euros ($77,550) each. The Bahn assured the public that the mini drones will be restricted to highly targeted areas, which should help allay those privacy concerns.

[Image Credit: thierry ehrmann, Flickr]

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Source: BBC, RTL

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/05/28/german-railways-drones-anti-graffiti/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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House Judiciary: Did Eric Holder lie under oath? (cbsnews)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, RSS and RSS Feed via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/308966016?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Is that Zach Galifianakis? Actor shaves big beard

Celebs

4 hours ago

Zach Galifianakis is ridding himself of more than a hangover as his popular film series comes to an end. The actor/comedian shaved off most of his trademark bushy beard.

Image: Zach Galifianakis

Getty Images, AP

Actor Zach Galifianakis, with full beard, left, at the premiere of "The Hangover Part III" in Westwood, Calif., on May 20, and cleaned up in Paris on May 27.

Galifianakis, who returns as Alan in "The Hangover Part III," showed up at the Paris premiere of the film on Monday sporting a mustache and tuft of hair on his chin.

In a three-piece gray suit paired with a pink shirt and red tie, and with his hair showing the effects of a combing, Galifianakis looked downright suave on the red carpet. He was joined by castmates Bradley Cooper, Ed Helms, Justin Bartha, Ken Jeong and Heather Graham.

Image: "Hangover III" stars

Julien Hekimian / Getty Images

Heather Graham, Justin Bartha, Ken Jeong, Bradley Cooper, Zach Galifianakis, Todd Phillips and Ed Helms attend the Paris premiere of "The Hangover Part III."

This isn't the first time Galifianakis has altered his appearance in drastic fashion. During an appearance on "Saturday Night Live" in 2010, the actor shaved down to a mustache after hosting the entire show with a beard. He performed in one skit and then had a fake beard applied for the show's signoff.

In 2011, again on "SNL," he shaved his hair into a Mohawk and then told the audience, "unfortunately we did not get to the Mr. T sketch."

"The Hangover Part III" opened in theaters over the holiday weekend and pulled in $51 million at the box office.

Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/zach-galifianakis-looks-sharp-after-shaving-signature-beard-6C10088198

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Benefits Of Traditional Office Furniture/Home ... - Hot Article Depot

Business owners in Malaysia have to go for revitalizing of their previous office with new office furniture on regular basis. For this, office owners must contact with the office furniture supplier of native space, in order that they might obtain suitable collection for brand new workplace interiors.

As of late, office owners may find a number of relevant selections, once they plan for kitting out your workplace in Malaysia. Business people should need to arrange their contacts with reliable office furniture supplier. On this means, they could obtain proper kind of office furniture with simple alternative, like inexpensive costs and extremely impressive executive items and lots of more.

On the other hand, homeowners of Malaysia can even obtain a few of the exclusive benefits by getting executive items of their homes. It?s because; executive home furniture may give enticing look to the homes. Therefore, by simply buying executive furniture from reliable home furniture supplier, individuals can improve the interior dcor of their homes. In this article, a lot of the consultants related with home or office enchancment techniques have revealed among the benefits of getting executive furnishings in workplaces and homes.

Firstly, if business owners go buying executive office furniture for his or her office, they may discover the development within the business as a result of such furnishings gives assistance and comfort to employees. The productiveness of employees is solely dependent on the consolation at their working place, which they get by sitting in fitted and ergonomic chairs. Hence, in order to guarantee good productiveness of workers, employers in Malaysia should acquire executive furniture from the close by office furniture supplier.

The comfort issue associated with executive home furniture is highly important for homeowners belong to completely different parts of Malaysia. This is because; home is the place, where people stay, calm and prefer to have complete peace of their minds. Therefore, homeowners ought to compulsorily buy their home-related items from appropriate home furniture supplier, which deals with executive furnishings for homes.

Secondly, a lot of the consultants in Malaysia have stated that the looks of office in front of workers and buyers is likely one of the largest elements in success of business. Traditional office furniture is without doubt one of the greatest ways of giving appealing and trendy look to the offices. Hence, buying of basic furniture from office furniture supplier may improve the atmosphere of places of work and give good status of the business in front of customers.

As just like the workplaces, acquisition of basic home furniture enhances the overall appurtenance of homes. Houses in Malaysia aren?t only the locations, wherewherein people stay, however are locations, wherein people get pleasure from some special moments of their life. Hence, it?s extremely important for homeowners to purchase greatest kind of furnishings from home furniture supplier.

Office furniture is one of the long-lasting items for any of the business organizations. Subsequently, business proprietors ought to seek to buy trendy furniture nearby office furniture supplier. Alternatively, business owners may browse the internet to find furniture suppliers in Malaysia dealing with executive office items.

Apart from this, browsing of internet may aid homeowners find suitable home furniture supplier concerned in selling classic furniture to homes. Thus, with few clicks of mouse, owners in Malaysia could simply have stylish home furniture of their homes.

Your satisfaction with our product is utmost importance to us. Elmod Furniture makes every effort to select and sell products constructed with highest-grade material, built by selected manufacturers to exacting standards. Should there be a problem with your order,please contact us immediately and we will promptle resolve it.

Source: http://hotarticledepot.com/benefits-of-traditional-office-furniturehome-furniture/

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Tuesday, May 28, 2013

?Big Foot? Silva drives Junior dos Santos crazy at UFC 160 press conference (Video)

You know, getting back to work the day after a holiday can be tough. Perhaps you're tired. Perhaps you were overserved at some point during the weekend. Perhaps you did too many home improvement projects and you need a holiday to recover from the holiday. Cagewriter understands. To wake you up, here's this video of UFC heavyweight Antonio Silva driving fellow heavyweight Junior dos Santos crazy after their UFC 160 fights. He uses the same techniques used in any good sibling fights.

Related coverage on Yahoo! Sports:
? Fan thwarts carjacker after watching UFC 160
? T.J. Grant among the stars at UFC 160
? How Mike Tyson helped T.J. Grant become $50K richer at UFC 160

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/big-foot-silva-drives-junior-dos-santos-crazy-121518384.html

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Sen. McCain makes trip to Syria to visit rebels

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Sen. John McCain, a proponent of arming Syrian rebels, quietly slipped into Syria for a meeting with anti-government fighters Monday.

Spokeswoman Rachael Dean confirms the Arizona Republican made the visit. She declined further comment about the trip.

The visit took place amid meetings in Paris involving efforts to secure participation of Syria's fractured opposition in an international peace conference in Geneva.

And in Brussels, the European Union decided late Monday to lift the arms embargo on the Syrian opposition while maintaining all other sanctions against Bashar Assad's regime after June 1, British Foreign Secretary William Hague said following the meeting.

Two years of violence in Syria has killed more than 70,000 people. President Barack Obama has demanded that Assad leave power, while Russia has stood by Syria, its closest ally in the Arab world.

McCain has been a fierce critic of Obama administration policy there while stopping short of backing U.S. ground troops in Syria, but he supports aggressive military steps against the Assad regime.

Gen. Salem Idris, chief of the Supreme Military Council of the Free Syrian Army, accompanied McCain across the Turkey-Syria border. McCain met with leaders of the Free Syrian Army from across the country, who asked him for increased U.S. support, including heavy weapons, a no-fly zone and airstrikes on Syrian government and Hezbollah forces, according to The Daily Beast, which first reported the senator's unannounced visit.

The White House declined to comment late Monday.

A State Department official said the department was aware of McCain crossing into Syrian territory on Monday. Further questions were referred to McCain's office.

Last Tuesday, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee voted to provide weapons to rebels in Syria, as well as military training to vetted rebel groups and sanctions against anyone who sells oil or transfers arms to the Assad regime. McCain is a member of the committee.

__

Associated Press writer Bradley Klapper in Paris contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/sen-mccain-makes-trip-syria-visit-rebels-185202901.html

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Gettysburg readies for 150th anniversary of battle

GETTYSBURG, Pa. (AP) ? The commemoration of this year's milestone anniversary of the Battle of Gettysburg will include amenities that soldiers would have relished 150 years ago.

A groomed path to the top of Little Round Top. Expanded cellphone coverage. Dozens of portable toilets.

The National Park Service and a cadre of community organizers are busily putting the finishing touches on preparations for the commemoration of the pivotal battle of the American Civil War that cemented this small Pennsylvania town's place in U.S history. Tens of thousands of visitors are expected for a 10-day schedule of events that begin June 29.

"I think we're ready," Bob Kirby, superintendent of Gettysburg National Military Park, said in a recent interview . "We're ready for what the world would like to see."

But that doesn't necessarily mean just flooding the historical 6,000-acre battlefield, and surrounding town, with the modern comforts of home. To help visitors better understand what happened at the Battle of Gettysburg on July 1-3, 1863, the National Park Service first decided to look back.

There were about 51,000 casualties ? historical estimates put the total dead around 7,500 ? at Gettysburg, considered a major turning point of the war after Northern forces turned away a Confederate advance.

In the years and decades that followed, natural and man-made changes altered the landscape The Home Sweet Home Motel that once stood across the street from a monument for Ohio soldiers just didn't provide the right feel. The forest that had grown in the distance from a Minnesota monument didn't accurately represent the thicket-laden terrain that soldiers encountered 150 years ago.

The battlefield rehabilitation process grew out of a master plan in 1999 that didn't set the 150th anniversary in 2013 as a deadline ? though it was a welcome and timely coincidence. The rehab work, which is mostly complete, is concentrated on areas of "major battle action."

"You can't ever go back in time to 1863, but you can deal with the major features so you can better understand the story," Kirby said.

Other fresh elements have been added in recent years, including an airy visitor center that opened in 2008, operated by the Gettysburg Foundation on behalf of and in partnership with the National Park Service.

It's bound to attract scores of newcomers as well as repeat visitors. The park typically attracts 1.2 million visitors a year ? a mark that park officials expect to easily exceed.

Margaret Eefsting, of Grand Rapids, Mich., returned recently for a weeklong trip to tour the battlefield, just three years after her most recent visit to Gettysburg.

"If it takes me all day, I will cover this battlefield," she exclaimed as she descended the path in the process of being freshly groomed at Little Round Top. The hill was the site of fierce fighting that gained extra notoriety in the 1993 movie "Gettysburg," which was based on the 1974 novel "The Killer Angels" by Michael Shaara.

"We missed so much the last time, and it was so hot, (my husband and I) didn't dare to get out of the car," Eefsting joked. "So this weather is better."

The park will be much more crowded, too, in a couple of months ? about 200,000 visitors are expected for anniversary week in late June and early July, according to Carl Whitehill, a spokesman for the Gettysburg Convention & Visitors Bureau. Most of the area's 2,600 hotel rooms are booked, and visitors are also taking up rooms from as far away as Frederick, Md., about 35 miles south.

Some visitors may bypass the park entirely to attend either one of the two battle re-enactments taking place on the weekends bookending the midweek anniversary events. Such re-enactments are held on private property, not park grounds.

The summertime events are just one of the highlights of a 150th anniversary commemoration that's been in the works for years.

Another major gathering is planned in November for the 150th anniversary of the Gettysburg Address, which President Abraham Lincoln famously delivered at the dedication ceremony for Soldiers' National Cemetery. The address began with the words "Four score and seven years ago."

Kirby said an invitation has been extended to President Barack Obama to attend November's event.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/gettysburg-readies-150th-anniversary-battle-173155124.html

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Monday, May 27, 2013

US intelligence embraces debate in security issues

WASHINGTON (AP) ? In the months leading up to the killing of Osama bin Laden, veteran intelligence analyst Robert Cardillo was given the nickname "Debbie Downer." With each new tidbit of information that tracked bin Laden to a high-walled compound in northern Pakistan ? phone records, satellite imaging, clues from other suspects ? Cardillo cast doubt that the terror network leader and mastermind was actually there.

As the world now knows well, President Barack Obama ultimately decided to launch a May 2011 raid on the Abbottabad compound that killed bin Laden. But the level of widespread skepticism that Cardillo shared with other top-level officials ? which nearly scuttled the raid ? reflected a sea change within the U.S. spy community, one that embraces debate to avoid "slam-dunk" intelligence in tough national security decisions.

The same sort of high-stakes dissent was on public display recently as intelligence officials grappled with conflicting opinions about threats in North Korea and Syria. And it is a vital part of ongoing discussions over whether to send deadly drone strikes against terror suspects abroad ? including U.S. citizens.

The three cases provide a rare look inside the secretive 16 intelligence agencies as they try to piece together security threats from bits of vague information from around the world. But they also raise concerns about whether officials who make decisions based on their assessments can get clear guidance from a divided intelligence community.

At the helm of what he calls a healthy discord is Director of National Intelligence James Clapper, who has spent more than two-thirds of his 72 years collecting, analyzing and reviewing spy data from war zones and rogue nations. Clapper, the nation's fourth top intelligence chief, says disputes are uncommon but absolutely necessary to get as much input as possible in far-flung places where it's hard for the U.S. to extract ? or fully understand ? ground-level realities.

"What's bad about dissension? Is it a good thing to have uniformity of view where everyone agrees all the time? I don't think so," Clapper told The Associated Press in an interview Friday. "...People lust for uniform clairvoyance. We're not going to do that."

"We are never dealing with a perfect set of facts," Clapper said. "You know the old saw about the difference between mysteries and secrets? Of course, we're held equally responsible for divining both. And so those imponderables like that just have to be factored."

Looking in from the outside, the dissension can seem awkward, if not uneasy ? especially when the risks are so high.

At a congressional hearing last month, Rep. Doug Lamborn, R-Colo., read from a Defense Intelligence Agency report suggesting North Korea is able to arm long-range missiles with nuclear warheads. The April 11 disclosure, which had been mistakenly declassified, came at the height of Kim Jong Un's sabre-rattling rhetoric and raised fears that U.S. territory or Asian nations could be targeted for an attack.

Within hours, Clapper announced that the DIA report did not reflect the opinions of the rest of the intelligence community, and that North Korea was not yet fully capable of launching a nuclear-armed missile.

Two weeks later, the White House announced that U.S. intelligence concluded that Syrian President Bashar Assad has probably used deadly chemical weapons at least twice in his country's fierce civil war. But White House officials said the intelligence wasn't strong enough to justify sending significant U.S. military support to Syrian rebels who are fighting Assad's regime.

Because the U.S. has few sources to provide first-hand information in Syria, the intelligence agencies split on how confident they were that Assad had deployed chemical weapons. The best they could do was conclude that the Syrian regime, at least, probably had undertaken such an effort. This put Obama in the awkward political position of having said the use of chemical weapons would cross a "red line" and have "enormous consequences," but not moving on the news of chemical weapons use, when the occasion arose, because the intelligence was murky.

Lamborn said he welcomes an internal intelligence community debate but is concerned that the North Korean threat was cavalierly brushed aside.

"If they want to argue among themselves, that's fine," said Lamborn, a member of the House Armed Services Committee. However, he also said, "We should be cautious when evaluating different opinions, and certainly give credence to the more sobering possibilities. ... When it comes to national security, I don't think we want to have rose-colored glasses on, and sweep threats under the rug."

Clapper said that, in fact, U.S. intelligence officials today are more accustomed to predicting gloom and doom. "We rain on parades a lot," he said.

Current and former U.S. intelligence officials say the vigorous internal debate was spawn from a single mistake about a threat ? and an overly aggressive response.

Congress demanded widespread intelligence reform after the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks, to fix a system where agencies hoarded threat information instead of routinely sharing it. Turf wars between the CIA and the FBI, in particular, were common. The CIA generally was considered the nation's top intelligence agency, and its director was the president's principal intelligence adviser.

The system was still in place in 2002, when the White House was weighing whether to invade Iraq. Intelligence officials widely ? and wrongly ? believed that then-dictator Saddam Hussein possessed weapons of mass destruction. By December 2002, the White House had decided to invade and was trying to outline its reasoning for doing so when then-CIA Director George Tenet described it as "a slam-dunk case."

The consequences were disastrous. There were no WMDs, but the U.S. wound up in a nearly nine-year war that killed nearly 5,000 American soldiers, left more than 117,000 Iraqis dead, and cost taxpayers at least $767 billion. The war also damaged U.S. credibility throughout the Mideast and, to a lesser extent, the world. Tenet later described his "slam-dunk" comment as "the two dumbest words I ever said."

Two years later, Congress signed sweeping reforms requiring intelligence officials to make clear when the spy agencies don't agree. Retired Amb. John Negroponte, who became the first U.S. national intelligence director in 2005, said if it hadn't been for the faulty WMD assessment "we wouldn't have had intelligence reform."

"It was then, and only then that the real fire was lit under the movement for reform," Negroponte said in a recent interview. "In some respects it was understandable, because Saddam had had all these things before, but we just allowed ourselves to fall into this erroneous judgment."

To prevent that from happening again, senior intelligence officials now encourage each of the spy agencies to debate information, and if they don't agree, to object to their peers' conclusions. Intelligence assessments spell out the view of the majority of the agencies, and highlight any opposing opinions in a process similar to a Supreme Court ruling with a majority and minority opinion.

The result, officials say, is an intelligence community that makes assessments by majority vote instead of group-think, and where each agency is supposed to have an equal voice. In effect, officials say, the CIA has had to lean back over the last decade as officials have given greater credence to formerly marginalized agencies. Among them is the State Department's Bureau of Intelligence and Research, which warned before the 2003 Iraq invasion that the CIA had overestimated Saddam's prospects to develop nuclear weapons.

Also included is the DIA, which has increased its ability during the Iraq and Afghanistan wars to gather ground-level intelligence throughout much of the Mideast and southwest Asia. In an interview, DIA director Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn would not discuss his agency's debated assessment on North Korea, but described a typical intelligence community discussion about "ballistic missiles in name-that-country" during which officials weigh in on how confident they feel about the information they're seeing.

"In the intelligence community we should encourage, what I would call, good competition," Flynn said. He added: "The DIA, in general, is always going to be a little bit more aggressive. ...As a defense community, we're closer to the war-fighting commanders; it may be in that part of our DNA."

Without the all the varying strands of information pieced together from across the intelligence agencies, officials now say the bin Laden raid would not have happened.

The CIA was running the manhunt, but the National Security Agency was contributing phone numbers and details from conversations it had intercepted in overseas wiretaps. The National Geospatial Agency provided satellite imagery of the Abbottabad compound ? from years past and more recently ? to get a sense of who might be living there. And it produced photos for a tall man walking the ground inside the compound ? even though they were never able to get a close look at his face.

One of the compound's balconies was blocked off by a seven-foot wall, Cardillo said, raising questions about who might want his view obscured by such a tall barrier. Officials also were keeping tabs on the people who lived in the compound, and trying to track how often they went outside.

Cardillo was vocal about his skepticism in each strand of new information he analyzed during the eight months he worked on the case, prompting colleagues to rib him about being a "Debbie Downer."

"I wasn't trying to be negative for the sake of being negative," Cardillo, a deputy national intelligence director who regularly briefs Obama, said in an interview Friday. "I felt, 'Boy, we've got to press hard against each piece of evidence.' Because, let's face it, we wanted bin Laden to be there. And you can get into group-think pretty quick."

To prevent that from happening, officials encouraged wide debate. At one point, they brought in a new four-man team of analysts who had not been briefed on the case to independently determine whether the intelligence gathered was strong enough to indicate bin Laden was there.

Their assessment was even more skeptical than Cardillo's. In the end the call to launch the raid was so close that, as officials have since said, it might as well have come down to a flip of a coin.

In most intelligence cases, the decisions aren't nearly as dramatic. But the stakes are always high.

Over the last four years, the Obama administration has expanded the deadly U.S. drone program in its hunt for extremists in terror havens. The drones have killed thousands of people since 2003 ? both suspected terrorists and civilian bystanders ? among them four U.S. citizens in Pakistan and Yemen.

The Justice Department this week said only one of the four Americans, Anwar al-Awlaki, who officials believe had ties to at least three attacks planned or carried out on U.S. soil, was targeted in the strikes. The other three were collateral damage in strikes aimed at others.

Though policy officials make the final call on when to strike, the intelligence community builds the case. Analysts must follow specific criteria in drone assessments, including near certainty of the target's whereabouts and the notion that bystanders will not be killed. They must also look at the likelihood of whether the terror suspects can be captured instead of killed.

In these sorts of life-and-death cases, robust debate is especially necessary, Clapper said. And if widespread doubts persist, the strike will be canceled.

"It is a high bar, by the way, and it should be," Clapper said. "If there is doubt and argument and debate ? and there always will be as we look at the totality the information we have on a potential target ? we damn well better have those debates and resolve those kinds of issues among ourselves the best we can."

Few have been more skeptical of the decision-making behind the drone strikes than Sen. Ron Wyden, an Oregon Democrat who has sat on the Senate Intelligence Committee since 2001. Earlier this year, he threatened to block Senate confirmation of CIA Director John Brennan until the White House gave Congress classified documents outlining its legal justification for targeting American citizens in drone strikes. The documents were turned over within hours of Brennan's confirmation hearing.

Generally, Wyden says, spy assessments have become far more reliable over the last decade, and especially since the flawed Iraq intelligence. But he maintains Congress should be given greater access to classified documents to independently verify intelligence analysis and assessments ? and safeguard against being misled.

"Certainly, solid analysis from the intelligence community is one of the most important sources of information that I have," Wyden said in an interview this month. "And if you look back, and the analysis is incorrect or if it's written in a way that portrays guesses at certainties, that can contribute to flawed decision-making.

"That's why I felt so strongly about insisting on actually getting those documents with respect to drones," Wyden said. "I've got to be able to verify it."

Clapper, who has been working on intelligence issues for a half-century, is well aware of how jittery many Americans feel about the spy community. The internal debates, he believes, should bolster their confidence that intelligence officials have thoroughly weighed all aspects of some of the world's most difficult security issues before deciding how high a threat they pose.

"I think it'd be very unhealthy ? and I get a lot of pushback from people ? if I tried to insist that you will have one uniform view and this is what I think, and that's what goes. That just wouldn't work," he said. "There is the fundamental tenet of truth to power, presenting inconvenient truths at inconvenient times. That's part of our system."

___

Follow Lara Jakes on Twitter at https://twitter.com/larajakesAP

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/us-intelligence-embraces-debate-security-issues-122715492.html

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NTSB: Thousands of U.S. bridges at risk of freak collapse

SEATTLE (AP) ? The collapse of an interstate highway bridge in northern Washington state should be a wake-up call that prompts an expansive safety review, according to the chairman of the National Transportation Safety Board.

Investigators need to establish a full account of what happened at the span over Interstate 5 about 60 miles north of Seattle and whether the same thing could happen elsewhere, Debbie Hersman said.

"At the end of the day, it's about preventing an accident like this," she said Saturday after examining the collapsed structure in the Skagit River.

The bridge came down last week after a truck bumped against the steel framework, prompting a collapse that sent two vehicles into the river. Three people involved escaped with non-life threatening injuries.

An investigation by The Associated Press suggests similar accidents could indeed happen elsewhere. Thousands of bridges around the U.S. are kept standing by engineering design, rather than sheer size or redundant protections. Such spans may be one freak accident or mistake away from collapse.

Bridge regulators call them "fracture critical" bridges, because if a single, vital component is compromised, they can crumple.

Hersman's team will spend about a week inspecting the I-5 bridge, talking to the truck driver whose vehicle hit it, and examining maintenance documents and previous accident reports.

Other over-height vehicles struck the Skagit River bridge before the collapse on Thursday, she noted. Investigators are using a high tech 3-D video camera to review the scene and attempt to pinpoint where the bridge failure began.

Hersman does not expect the investigation to delay removal of debris from the river or work on temporary replacement or repair plans. State and federal officials will work together on the investigation, she said.

They'll be watching for safety issues that could affect other bridges.

"The results can be very catastrophic," Hersman said. "We're very fortunate in this situation."

Washington state officials said Saturday that it will take time to find both short- and long-term fixes for the I-5 bridge.

While, the National Transportation and Safety Board finishes its inspection, state workers will begin removing debris from the river. Next, a temporary solution will be put in place to return traffic to Washington state's most important north-south roadway.

Inspectors say they are working to find out whether the collapse was a fluke or a sign of bigger problems.

A trucker was hauling a load of drilling equipment Thursday evening when his load bumped against the steel framework over the bridge. He looked in his rearview mirror and saw the span collapse into the water behind him.

Motorists should not expect to drive on I-5 between Mount Vernon and Burlington for many weeks and possibly months, said Washington Transportation Department spokesman Bart Treece.

About 71,000 vehicles use that stretch of highway every day.

Officials were looking for a temporary, pre-fabricated bridge to replace the 160-foot section that failed, Gov. Jay Inslee said Friday. That option could be in place in weeks. Otherwise, it could be months before a replacement can be built, the governor said.

Inslee said it will cost $15 million to repair the bridge. The federal government has promised $1 million in emergency dollars and more money could come later, according to Washington's congressional delegation.

___

Contact Donna Blankinship at https://twitter.com/dgblankinship

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ntsb-says-wash-bridge-collapse-wake-call-081218583.html

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Kenya: UK soldier killing suspect arrested in 2010

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) ? A suspect in last week's savage killing of a British soldier on a London street was arrested in Kenya in 2010 while apparently preparing to train and fight with al-Qaida-linked Somali militants, an anti-terrorism police official said Sunday.

Michael Adebolajo, who was carrying a British passport, was then handed over to British authorities in the East African country, another Kenyan official said.

The information surfaced as London's Metropolitan Police said specialist firearms officers arrested a man Sunday suspected of conspiring to murder 25-year-old British soldier Lee Rigby. Police gave few details about the suspect, only saying he is 22 years old.

The arrest brought to nine the number of suspects who have been taken into custody regarding Rigby's horrific killing in London. Two have been released without charge, and one was released on bail pending further questioning. No one has been charged in the case.

The British soldier, who had served in Afghanistan, was run over, then stabbed with knives in the Woolwich area in southeast London on Wednesday afternoon as he was walking near his barracks.

Adebolajo, 28, and Michael Adebowale, 22, are the main suspects in the killing and remained under armed guard in separate London hospitals after police shot them at the scene.

In 2010, Adebolajo was arrested with five others near Kenya's border with Somalia, Kenya's anti-terrorism police unit chief Boniface Mwaniki told The Associated Press. Police believed Adebolajo was going to work with Somali militant group al-Shabab.

Mwaniki said that Adebolajo was deported from Kenya after his arrest in 2010. Kenya's government spokesman said he was arrested under a different name, and taken to court before being handed to British authorities.

"Kenya's government arrested Michael Olemindis Ndemolajo. We handed him to British security agents in Kenya, and he seems to have found his way to London and mutated to Michael Adebolajo," spokesman Muthui Kariuki said. "The Kenyan government cannot be held responsible for what happened to him after we handed him to British authorities."

Kariuki said Adebolajo was traveling on a British passport, but he could not confirm if it was authentic.

When asked whether British security agents and embassy officials had handled Adebolajo in Kenya, a British Foreign Office spokeswoman said in a brief statement: "We can confirm a British national was arrested in Kenya in 2010. The Foreign and Commonwealth Office provided consular assistance as normal for British nationals." She did not elaborate and said she did not have information about what had happened to Adebolajo then.

Rigby's grieving family visited the scene of his killing in London on Sunday, pausing for a few moments in reflection and laying flowers to join the hundreds of floral tributes already left at the nearby Woolwich Barracks by well-wishers.

The soldier's gruesome slaying has horrified Britain, partly because it was captured by witnesses' cellphones. A video picked up by British media showed one of the suspects, with bloodied hands, making political statements and warning of more violence as the soldier lay on the ground behind him.

Hardline Muslim leaders say the man in the video was Adebolajo, and they have described him as an Islam convert who used to take part in London demonstrations organized by British radical group al-Muhajiroun. The group catapulted to notoriety after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks by organizing an event to celebrate the airplane hijackers, and was banned in Britain in 2010.

More than 20 supporters of the group have been arrested over terrorism offenses, including a foiled plot to blow up central London nightclub Ministry of Sound and a bomb attack on London's Territorial Army base.

Abu Nusaybah, a friend of Adebolajo's, has asserted in a BBC interview that Adebolajo became withdrawn after he allegedly suffered abuse by Kenyan security forces during interrogation in prison there. Nusaybah was arrested by counter-terrorism police outside the BBC's London studios Friday night immediately after recording the interview, and police said Sunday his detention has been extended to May 31.

Anti-terrorism chief Mwaniki on Sunday rejected Nusaybah's allegations. Mwaniki said at the time there were no indications of torture or abuse, but that the unit would further investigate.

Mwaniki said dozens of foreign youth are arrested every year attempting to cross the Kenyan border to join al-Shabab, which claims to be fighting a jihad, or holy war, against the Somali government and African Union forces.

Al-Shabab controlled Mogadishu from roughly 2007 to 2011. The group still dominates most of south central Somalia but has seen its territory reduced after military pushes by African Union and Somali forces.

According to an August U.S. State Department report on terrorism, al-Shabab continues to maintain training camps in southern Somalia for young recruits, including Americans who have traveled there from Somali communities in the United States.

The camps have churned out dozens of bombers who've launched attacks in and outside Somalia.

Al-Shabab boasts several hundred foreign fighters, mostly East African nationals and veterans from the Iraqi and Afghanistan wars.

British officials have been on the lookout for security threats originating from Somalia for some years.

In a speech in 2010, Jonathan Evans, then head of Britain's MI5 domestic security service, warned that "a significant number" of British residents were training in al-Shabab camps to fight in the insurgency there.

"I am concerned that it is only a matter of time before we see terrorism on our streets inspired by those who are today fighting alongside al-Shabab," he said.

Meanwhile, London police said a man in his 20s was stabbed Sunday in the Woolwich area of London close to where Rigby was killed, momentarily rattling people in the area. But Scotland Yard said the stabbing was not related to terrorism or to Wednesday's slaying. A spokesman said the victim was not a soldier, and one man was arrested for assault.

Deputy Assistant Commissioner Stuart Osborne, head of Scotland Yard's counterterrorism command, said officers are pursuing CCTV, social media, forensic and intelligence leads in the Rigby investigation. He appealed for anyone who knew the two attackers to contact police with information.

British officials said Sunday they are also setting up a new terrorism task force to tackle radical preachers and extremism. Home Secretary Theresa May said the group will look at whether new powers and laws are needed to clamp down on religious leaders and organizations who promote extremist messages and who target potential recruits in British jails, schools and mosques.

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Hui reported from London.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/kenya-uk-soldier-killing-suspect-arrested-2010-132149952.html

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