Sunday, September 30, 2012

Apple?s CEO Tim Cook apologizes for Apple?s Map app

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Excerpt from: Apple?s CEO Tim Cook apologizes for Apple?s Map app

Apple has been hit hard by the critics and users regarding the Maps app in iOS 6. Apple removed the Google-powered iOS Maps application and replaced it with their own in-house app that?s powered by Tom Tom. The biggest drawbacks of Maps are the inaccurate mapping data, lack of public transit rou...

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Source: http://news.iphoneworld.ca/inews/Apple%E2%80%99s+CEO+Tim+Cook+apologizes+for+Apple%E2%80%99s+Map+app

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Apple Maps For iOS 6 Drops To 4% Usage

Posted: September 30, 2012

Apple Maps

Apple iOS 6 users are not happy with Apple Maps and that point was delivered soundly to Apple on Sunday when one study discovered that Apple Maps usage has fallen to 4% of iOS 6 users.

The numbers for Apple Maps usage were pulled by data management company Snappli which noted a huge decrease in the number of Apple Maps users since the same period last week. The company notes that 4% usage is far below former Google Maps use on the device.

To determine the number of users taking advantage of Apple Maps the company looked at data usage from 5,000 Snappli users following the release of iOS 6 on September 19. The company first discovered that 64 percent of its users had migrated to iOS 6 in the US and UK.

Before the migration 25 percent of Snappli users were utilizing Google Maps at least one time per day. After the release of iOS 6 that number actually jumped to 35 percent for Apple Maps users, only to plummet after they recognized large shortcomings in the Apple Maps product.

While Snappli users have chosen en masse to abandon the Apple Maps software the company does not necessarily speak for the population at large since the app serves a very specific subset of users.

Apple in the meantime has promised to fix the various issues associated with Apple Maps while Google is likely to pounce on the horrendous nature of the mapping software by combining Google Maps and Google Earth into a fluid mobile app that provides better directions and more vivid maps.

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Saturday, September 29, 2012

Google can't enforce German Microsoft injunction: ruling

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The next generation of video game consoles is upon us. Nintendo released the release date and pricing details for its new Wii U console yesterday in a press conference in New York City. The new gaming platform will ship on November 18, just in time for the holiday season, and more specifically for the Black Friday shopping bonanza. There will be two models, a $299 model with more basic pack-ins and a $349 model that comes with a game and other accessories. The system will launch with game titles like New Super Mario Bros U, Nintendo Land, and Rayman Legends.The Wii U is considered to be the first of the next round of video game consoles to come from the big three companies: Microsoft, Nintendo, and Sony. Read?More?>>


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Microsoft has lowered the price of its best selling Kinect Xbox accessory. The tech giant announced today that the motion control device will now cost $109.99 down from $149.99, making for a slash of $40.The Microsoft Kinect is a video game peripheral that allows players to forgo traditional gaming controllers and instead command games with their bodies. The device can detect a wide range of movements from up to two people at once. Recently, there have been numerous rumors of a new-and-improved Kinect in development, not to mention a new Xbox console, and it stands to reason that this price drop could signal an upcoming announcement.

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Learn about the LCD screen on your digital camera in this digital photography lessons video from Howcast.

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As the number of Android and iOS apps increases, so does the challenge of grabbing customers attention. Heres what you need to know about app marketing.

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The iPhone is not the only thing Apple announced today. New versions of the iPod Nano and the iPod Touch were revealed at the tech giant's event in San Francisco. The new iPod Nano design is completely different from the latest square model. It will have a 2.5 inch multi-touch screen and will be able to be integrated with iTunes. The new iPod Touch will be bigger, having the 4 inch screen just like the new iPhone 5. It will have a faster processor for games and a better camera. Both versions of the iPod will also come in a variety of colors.The Nano will start at $149 for the 16GB version and $199 for the 16GB version of the iPod Touch.Each of these will also include the newly redesigned headphones called EarPods. Apple said they used 3D ear scans to create a fit that should work with most ears. The redesign took three years and will ship as a stand alone product today, September 12. For more on Apple's announcement, keep it right here to the Financial News Network, follow us on twitter @FNNOnline or go to our website at fnno.com.

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In the video world monitors are probably more critical than any everyday old computer monitor is. Serious photographers who play with Photoshop will know what I mean. Calibration is everything. Which leads me neatly to the BENQ GW2450 which landed on my desk today.

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Good morning, you are watching The Financial News Network on Fnno.com, I'm Geoffrey Parrish. If you thought that weekends were only a sales bonanza for movies, think again. The new iPhone 5 launched Friday September 21st, and Apple has announced that it sold over five million iPhone 5's in the device's first weekend.This new version of the iPhone is the slimmest and lightest ever, and features the new iOS 6 operating system. iOS 6 also launched last week, and has already been downloaded by over 100 million Apple mobile users.The much anticipated smartphone launched in 9 countries already, including the US, Japan, and the United Kingdom, and will be launching in 22 more by September 28th. For this and more business news, follow us on twitter @fnnonline, or see more videos on the web at fnno.com Read?More?>>


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Warning: graphic video. Six teenagers were in custody Friday on charges they brutally beat a neighbor on her stoop just 'for fun' and then posted cellphone video of the attack on Facebook, authorities said.

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An outspoken woman protesting outside a Romney campaign event in Cleveland, Ohio says she is voting for Obama because "he gave us a phone, he gonna do more." She's referring to the free government cell phone program.

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Cellphone companies are placing antennae in residential areas without warning because Industry Canada rules say there doesn't have to be any notification unless the towers are over 15 metres tall

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Immersing your phone under water might not seem like the most sensible thing to do, but it's surprising just how many people manage to do just that.

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NeoMedia (PINK:NEOM) is popular among investors today after the company announced it will be licensing its patent portfolio to Microsoft (NYSE:MSFT). The portfolio consists of 74 patents mostly dealing with the mobile barcode industry. The technology they pioneered turns phone cameras into barcode scanners which allows for a variety of uses including mobile marketing, consumer oriented advertising, and mobile ticketing and couponing. Microsoft will have a worldwide, non-exclusive license to the portfolio, allowing the company to use NeoMedia's assets to create new, customized solutions for mobile barcode software.This could not only bring more value to NeoMedia but also to Microsoft as it continues to try and roll out its new line of Windows smartphones.

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From Fnno.com, this is the Financial News Network. Here's a few things to watch for in the financial world today September 5.Pandora Media Inc. (NYSE:P), the online radio that predicts listener music preferences, is down over 16% in trading this morning, on the news that Apple is planning to develop a competing music streaming service. Apple's potential service would work on its iPhone and iPad, as well as on Mac computers and laptops running Windows, according to the Wall Street Journal. Prior to this news, the Oakland, California-based Pandora was doing well-- its shares had grown 26% this year, and it had been able to hold off rivals like Spotify. But it is difficult to compete with the Apple juggernaut.Amazon.com (NASDAQ:AMZN) unveiled some exciting new products yesterday, and the company is seeing a corresponding bump in the market, trading up over 1%. At a news conference yesterday, Amazon chief Jeff Bezos introduced multiple versions of a new tablet. The largest, the Kindle Fire HD, has an 8.9 inch display, a camera, and cellular data connectivity. It is cheaper than the iPad by $200. All of the new Amazon products are being positioned as cheaper alternatives to Apple's tablets, with Apple's newest iPad starting at $499 compared to Amazon's Kindle Fires starting at $199.Lululemon Athletica (LLL.TO), the Canadian yogawear retailer, is up this morning in response to its reports of a higher quarterly profit. The company reported earnings of $57.2 million, or 39 cents per share, in the second-quarter. This is sharply up from earnings of $38.4 million, or 26 cents a share, a year ago. Lululemon also raised its full-year forecast for net revenue to $1.345 billion to $1.360 billion, up from $1.32 to $1.34 billion. The activewear company, which was founded in 1998 and became famous for its $98 yoga pants, has already firmly established itself in Canada, and is continuing to expand its presence in the United States, where it is popular among wealthy, active women. Those were a few things to watch out for here on the Financial News Network. For more coverage and analysis of the business world follow us on twitter @FNNOnline or check out our website at fnno.com. Read?More?>>


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Good morning, you are watching The Financial News Network on Fnno.com, I'm Geoffrey Parrish. If you thought that weekends were only a sales bonanza for movies, think again. The new iPhone 5 launched Friday September 21st, and Apple has announced that it sold over five million iPhone 5's in the device's first weekend.This new version of the iPhone is the slimmest and lightest ever, and features the new iOS 6 operating system. iOS 6 also launched last week, and has already been downloaded by over 100 million Apple mobile users.The much anticipated smartphone launched in 9 countries already, including the US, Japan, and the United Kingdom, and will be launching in 22 more by September 28th. For this and more business news, follow us on twitter @fnnonline, or see more videos on the web at fnno.com

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Pandora Media Inc. (NYSE:P), the online radio that predicts listener music preferences, is down over 16% in trading this morning, on the news that Apple is planning to develop a competing music streaming service. Apple's potential service would work on its iPhone and iPad, as well as on Mac computers and laptops running Windows, according to the Wall Street Journal. Prior to this news, the Oakland, California-based company was doing well-- its shares had grown 26% this year, and it had been able to hold off rivals like Spotify. But it is difficult to compete with the Apple juggernaut.

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The U.S. Naval Academy's 22nd Company in Annapolis, Maryland apparently has some free time on their hands. So they recreated a very professional looking music video spoof of South Korean artist Psy's Gangnam Style. Vanessa Yurkevich tells about the new viral video.

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Apple has announced its latest iPhone, as well as improvements to its line of mobile music players.

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Are you really pumped for the new iPhone, but you're not sure what to do with your old one? We've got you covered! From donating to soldiers to transforming it into your home music system, Gillian Pensavalle has some ideas to get you through this exciting, yet confusing time.

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NYT: Supreme Court faces crucial rulings

The Supreme Court returns to the bench on Monday to confront not only a docket studded with momentous issues but also a new dynamic among the justices.

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The coming term will probably include major decisions on affirmative action in higher education admissions, same-sex marriage and a challenge to the heart of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Those rulings could easily rival the last term?s as the most consequential in recent memory.

The theme this term is the nature of equality, and it will play out over issues that have bedeviled the nation for decades. ?Last term will be remembered for one case,? said Kannon K. Shanmugam, a lawyer with Williams & Connolly. ?This term will be remembered for several.?

The term will also provide signals about the repercussions of Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr.?s surprise decision in June to join the court?s four more liberal members and supply the decisive fifth vote in the landmark decision to uphold President Obama?s health care law. Every decision of the new term will be scrutinized for signs of whether Chief Justice Roberts, who had been a reliable member of the court?s conservative wing, has moved toward the ideological center of the court.

?The salient question is: Is it a little bit, or is it a lot?? said Paul D. Clement, a lawyer for the 26 states on the losing side of the core of the health care decision.

The term could clarify whether the health care ruling will come to be seen as the case that helped Chief Justice Roberts protect the authority of his court against charges of partisanship while accruing a mountain of political capital in the process. He and his fellow conservative justices might then run the table on the causes that engage him more than the limits of federal power ever have: cutting back on racial preferences, on campaign finance restrictions and on procedural protections for people accused of crimes.

It is also possible that the chief justice will become yet another disappointment to conservatives, who are used to them from the Supreme Court, and that he will join Justice Anthony M. Kennedy as a swing vote at the court?s center. There is already some early evidence of this trend: in each of the last three terms, only Chief Justice Roberts and Justice Kennedy were in the majority more than 90 percent of the time.

?We all start with the conventional wisdom that Justice Kennedy is going to decide the close cases,? said Mr. Clement, who served as United States solicitor general under President George W. Bush. ?We?ve all been reminded that that?s not always the case.?

The texture of the new term will be different, as the court?s attention shifts from federalism and the economy to questions involving race and sexual orientation. The new issues before the court are concrete and consequential: Who gets to go to college? To get married? To vote?

First up
On Oct. 10, the court will hear Fisher v. University of Texas, No. 11-345, a major challenge to affirmative action in higher education. The case was brought by Abigail Fisher, a white woman who says she was denied admission to the University of Texas based on her race. The university selects part of its class by taking race into account, as one factor among many, in an effort to ensure educational diversity.

Just nine years ago, the Supreme Court endorsed that approach in a 5-to-4 vote. The majority opinion in the case, Grutter v. Bollinger, was written by Justice Sandra Day O?Connor, who said she expected it to last for a quarter of a century.

But Justice O?Connor retired in 2006. She was succeeded by Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr., who was appointed by Mr. Bush and who has consistently voted to limit race-conscious decision making by the government. Chief Justice Roberts, another Bush appointee, has made no secret of his distaste for what he has called ?a sordid business, this divvying us up by race.?

Justices Kennedy, Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas all dissented in the Grutter case, and simple math suggests that there may now be five votes to limit or overturn it.

The reach of such a decision could be limited by the idiosyncrasies of the admissions system in Texas. The university provides automatic admission to students in Texas who graduate in roughly the top 10 percent of their high school classes. That approach generates substantial diversity, partly because many Texas high schools remain racially homogeneous.

Ms. Fisher narrowly missed the cutoff at a high school whose students have above-average test scores for the state. She was rejected for one of the remaining spots under the part of the admissions program that considers applicants? race.

The court may uphold the Texas system under Grutter, or it may rule against it on narrow grounds by saying, for instance, that race-conscious admissions are forbidden where a race-neutral method ? like the 10 percent program ? can be said to be working.

But the court may also follow the health care ruling with a second landmark decision, this one barring racial preferences in admissions decisions altogether. Given persistent achievement gaps, even after controlling for family income, such a ruling would make the student bodies of many colleges less black and Hispanic and more white and Asian.

The court will probably also take on same-sex marriage. ?I think it?s most likely that we will have that issue before the court toward the end of the current term,? Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg said at the University of Colorado on Sept. 19.

She was referring to challenges to an aspect of the federal Defense of Marriage Act, which bars the federal government from providing benefits to same-sex couples married in states that allow such unions. The federal appeals court in Boston struck down that part of the law, and both sides have urged the court to hear the case. More than 1,000 federal laws deny tax breaks, medical coverage and burial services, among other benefits, to spouses in same-sex marriages.

'We are now a very different nation'
The justices will also soon decide whether to hear a more ambitious marriage case filed in California by Theodore B. Olson and David Boies. It seeks to establish a federal constitutional right to same-sex marriage.

Chief Justice Roberts has not yet voted in a major gay rights case. Justice Kennedy wrote the majority opinions in both Lawrence v. Texas, a 2003 decision that struck down a Texas law making gay sex a crime, and Romer v. Evans, a 1996 decision that struck down a Colorado constitutional amendment that banned the passage of laws protecting gay men and lesbians. Most observers see him as the decisive vote in same-sex marriage cases.

The justices are also quite likely to take another look at the constitutionality of a signature legacy of the civil rights era, the Voting Rights Act of 1965. In 2009, the court signaled that it had reservations about the part of the law that requires the federal review of changes in election procedures in parts of the country with a history of discrimination, mostly the South.

?We are now a very different nation? than the one that first enacted the Voting Rights Act, Chief Justice Roberts wrote for himself and seven other justices. ?Whether conditions continue to justify such legislation is a difficult constitutional question we do not answer today.?

The chief justice seemed to invite Congress to revise the law, but lawmakers have taken no action.

Challenges to the law have arisen in several lawsuits in the current election season, including ones concerning redistricting and voter identification requirements.

?It will be interesting to see if the justices worry half as much about the emerging restrictions on voting as they worried about restrictions on political spending,? said Pamela S. Karlan, a law professor at Stanford.

On Monday, the new term will start with a case of great interest to business groups, Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum, No. 10-1491. The case was brought by 12 Nigerian plaintiffs who said the defendants, foreign oil companies, had been complicit in human rights violations committed against them by the Abacha dictatorship in Nigeria. The question in the case is whether American courts have jurisdiction over such suits, and business groups are hoping the answer is no.

In the last term, business groups achieved a series of victories, often by lopsided majorities. In cases with an individual on one side and business interests on the other, the court ruled for the business side 12 out of 14 times, according to calculations by Lauren R. Goldman, a lawyer with the firm Mayer Brown. In the two previous terms, the number of business cases was comparable, but individuals won at least half of the time.

Introducing himself to the nation at his confirmation hearings in 2005, Chief Justice Roberts said that ?judges are like umpires? in that they do not make the rules but merely apply them.

?Nobody ever went to a ballgame to see the umpire,? he said.

But the calls Chief Justice Roberts made in the health care case were surprising enough that it will be hard to look away. He voted with the court?s conservatives to say that the law was not authorized by Congress?s power to regulate interstate commerce and then joined the court?s liberals to say it was authorized by Congress?s power to levy taxes. No other justice joined every part of his controlling opinion.

Charles Fried, who served as solicitor general in the Reagan administration and filed a brief in support of the law, said the reasoning in the health care decision was mystifying enough to foreclose predictions about the future of the Roberts court.

?This is a court that under Chief Justice Roberts called a ball a strike, a strike a ball, but got the batter to base where he belonged,? said Professor Fried, who teaches at Harvard Law School. ?So who knows what to expect.?

This story, "Supreme Court Faces Crucial Rulings in Coming Term," originally appeared in The New York Times.

Copyright ? 2012 The New York Times

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/49224738/ns/us_news-the_new_york_times/

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BYOD, And Don't Forget Your Security | Business 2 Community

Are you amped that your workforce has gone mobile? Now you?ve got business in the moment, on the go, and in the palm of your hand.

However, the bring-your-own-device (BYOD) movement has exponentially increased the demands on IT organizations for security on a myriad of platforms.

Right now it?s critical to maximize potential and minimize risk, as employees use their own mobile apps regardless of compliance. Consider these stats listed in the white paper Enterprise Mobile Security: Rock Solid or At Risk?

  • 61% of workers use social networking services not supported by their IT departments
  • 43% chat on non-supported IM services
  • 26% employ their own online collaboration tools

What does this mean for the security of your business data?

The most obvious (and preventable) pitfall is that mobile devices are easy to lose or steal. A misplaced iPhone might cost $400. However, lost data could mean tarnished intellectual property and bad press ? the damage of which is unquantifiable. With approximately 70% of all enterprise data residing on a mobile device, this becomes an expensive problem. A compromised data breach runs about $258 per record for mobile devices.

With this in mind, organizations should strive to protect data, not devices.

According to Larry Ponemon, chairman and founder of Ponemon Institute, only 53% of companies had a mobile policy in place. And, approximately 16% had a policy that encompassed the entire enterprise.

The building blocks for an effective mobile security strategy

Even though these steps seem obvious, these capabilities can mean the difference between a minor nuisance and an arduous lawsuit:

  • Mandatory password-based entry
  • Auto-lock
  • Remote wipe
  • Access to safe, quality apps that can be accessed based on roles and privileges

The key is to never be lulled into a false sense of security by a one-size-fits-all solution, because you can?t rely on technology alone. By developing sound policies, you can address your company?s specific needs, such as device standards, IT support, financial responsibilities, and legal implications.

Here are some areas that should be considered when creating your own BYOD policy:

  • Device Use: Define which devices will be allowed.
  • Authentication: Install digital certificates in devices and support end-to-end encryption through a VPN so you can track the user?s identity, device, and location.
  • Remote Wipe: Employ this if a device is lost or stolen ? or if an employee leaves the company.
  • User Data: Specify who owns and controls what data.
  • Apps: Provide employees with a list of apps that are allowed ? as well as those that can?t be used.
  • Approval Procedure: Offer a procedure for approving new devices and apps in a rapidly changing mobile environment.

For optimal mobile security, organizations have to combat both internal and external threats. They must also accept that there is no perfect solution, and strategies need to evolve with technology. Now more than ever before, it?s expected that organizations incorporate numerous security tools, but never lose sight of the human factor.

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Source: http://www.business2community.com/mobile-apps/byod-and-dont-forget-your-security-0294705

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Friday, September 28, 2012

The Note's Must-Reads for Friday, September 28, 2012

Compiled by ABC News Digital News Associates and Desk Assistants Jayce Henderson, Amanda VanAllen, Carrie Halperin and Ben Waldron.

VIRGINIA ABC News' Gregory Krieg, Sunlen Miller and Devin Dwyer: Dueling 'Patriots' Obama and Romney Clash in Virginia "Patriotism" was the word of the day on the presidential campaign trail, as President Obama and Mitt Romney - both in Virginia today - sought to tie their economic plans to broader ideas about America's place in the global milieu. Romney seized on scheduled cuts to defense spending and a downward revision of the country's economic growth, warning that the combination posed a "long-term threat to our military capability and to our national security." LINK The New York Times' Helene Cooper and Ashley Parker: " In Virginia, Nominees Reach Out to Military" In case anyone is wondering, Virginia is up for grabs this election. So, with 39 days to go, President Obama and Mitt Romney dueled in the commonwealth on Thursday, both trying to lock up support from voters with ties to the military. LINK

The Washington Post's Amy Gardner and Philip Rucker: " President Obama, Mitt Romney court veterans in Virginia" Mitt Romney was in Virginia on Thursday to do what he has been trying to do a lot lately: reach voters in places where he had hoped to be faring better by now. On this day, his targets were military veterans and active-duty service members, a once-reliably Republican group that recent polls show to be closely split between the two candidates. LINK

PRESIDENT OBAMA The Boston Globe's Christopher Rowland: " Obama's Stance on Natural Gas Carries Risks" President Obama's plan to boost domestic drilling for natural gas carries the promise of new jobs and provides a convenient pivot away from his lurching bid to transform America's energy economy with wind and solar power. Yet in pockets of the nation, including the communities around Colorado's pristine mountains, such a shift carries a political price. LINK]

Bloomberg's Jim Snyder and Danielle Ivory : " Obama Cabinet Flunks Disclosure Test With 19 in 20 Ignoring Law" On his first full day in office, President Barack Obama ordered federal officials to "usher in a new era of open government" and "act promptly" to make information public. As Obama nears the end of his term, his administration hasn't met those goals, failing to follow the requirements of the Freedom of Information Act, according to an analysis of open-government requests filed by Bloomberg News. LINK

JOE BIDEN The Los Angeles Times' Michael A. Memoli: " Biden to say Romney plan would tax Social Security benefits" The Obama campaign is dispatching Vice President Joe Biden to Florida to deliver a new attack on the Republican ticket over entitlements: He'll allege that Mitt Romney's economic plan could force senior citizens to pay more in taxes on their Social Security benefits. Biden begins a two-day trip through Florida on Friday with stops in Boca Raton and Tamarac, where a campaign official says he will "highlight the clearest choice Floridians have faced in a generation" in November. LINK

CAMPAIGN FUNDING The Washington Times' Luke Rosiak: " Soros commits $1.5 million to super PACs" Liberal hedge fund manager George Soros is pledging $1.5 million in new funding for Democratic super PACs, the New York Times reported Thursday, continuing a reversal of tide that has seen lagging super PAC backing President Obama on the upswing as the Mitt Romney super PAC's finances have eroded. LINK

The Hills' Cameron Joseph: " Soros donates $1M to pro-Obama super-PAC" Liberal billionaire George Soros has donated $1 million to Priorities USA, the super-PAC backing President Obama's reelection, two sources with knowledge of the donation confirmed to The Hill. The donation comes as a shift for Soros, who'd donated to other pro-Democratic super-PACs earlier this year and has long bankrolled a number of liberal grassroots organizations - but had yet to give any money directly toward supporting Obama this cycle. LINK

USA Today's Catalina Camia: " Billionaire donates $1M to Obama super PAC" Billionaire financier George Soros has given $1 million to the primary super PAC helping President Obama. The funding is a boost to Priorities USA Action in the final weeks of the campaign. LINK

MEDICARE Politico's Maggie Haberman: " Medicare, Obama edition" Jonathan Martin, on the home page tonight, takes note of the daylight between President Obama's past statements on reforming Medicare and his and his campaign's criticisms of the GOP ticket over the Paul Ryan proposals for changing the social welfare program. There's what appears in Bob Woodward's book, but there's more: In 2009, right before he was sworn in, the president-elect told The Washington Post he wanted to make "hard decisions" on entitlements. LINK

MITT ROMNEY The Wall Street Journal's Neil King Jr: " Swing States a Tough Sell for Romney" Mitt Romney and President Barack Obama are running neck and neck in the battleground states of North Carolina and Nevada, new polling shows, while Mr. Romney faces an uphill battle to win New Hampshire, a state he picked to launch his campaign and that has long served as a second home. The new Wall Street Journal/NBC News/Marist Poll surveys of likely voters in the three states underscored the mounting challenges the Republican nominee faces as he tries to chart a path to victory just over a month before Election Day. LINK

ABC NEWS VIDEOS " Obama, Romney Aim for Early Voters Before First Debate" LINK

BOOKMARKS The Note: LINK The Must-Reads Online: LINK Top Line Webcast (12noon EST M-F): LINK ABC News Politics: LINK The Political Punch (Jake Tapper): LINK George's Bottom Line (George Stephanopoulos): LINK Follow ABC News on Twitter: LINK ABC News Mobile: LINK ABC News app on your iPhone/iPod Touch/iPad: LINK

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Thursday, September 27, 2012

LG Optimus Vu II specs officially unveiled: new CPU, IR, stylus and 'One Key' accessory

LG Optimus Vu II specs officially unveiled new CPU, IR, stylus and 'One Key' accessory

Whether or not there's a 5-inch 4:3 aspect ratio spot in the world to fit LG's Optimus Vu is still up for debate, but the company is pressing on and has now officially revealed specs for its follow up, the Optimus Vu II. Matching the specs leaked previously the CPU is a Qualcomm MSM8960 that's a newer design than the previous one, but is still a dual-core chip clocked at 1.5GHz. The RAM has been doubled to 2GB, the battery is just a hair larger at 2,150mAh and it will come with Android 4.0 out of the box plus that integrated IR blaster and QRemote software to control your home theater. The VoLTE capability listed in the leak is here and accounted for, as well as a Rubberdium Pen 2.0 stylus with a thinner, more precise nub. One thing we hadn't heard about is its optional "One Key" accessory, a waterproof fob intended for your key ring that can be pressed to make your phone beep loudly if you need to find it, and light up blue or red to alert you when there are messages or if it has finished charging. The Optimus Vu II is priced at 966,900 won ($864) in Korea, though we'll have to wait for a US announcement to have any idea how much it will cost when it ships here.

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LG Optimus Vu II specs officially unveiled: new CPU, IR, stylus and 'One Key' accessory originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 27 Sep 2012 00:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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