Monday, January 16, 2012

Illegal books on Android compete with Google?s Market plans (Appolicious)

Another string of apps is causing trouble in the Android Market. Dozens of commercial book collections, including the entire Harry Potter series, have been posted to the official Android app store by a developer named UKER, attracting thousands of illegal downloads. UKER?s apps include full e-book text, and despite poor quality and iffy navigation, the free book downloads have gained in popularity. Titles include The Vampire Diaries, as well as 15 novels by Patricia Cornwell and a handful of Stephen King titles.

UKER?s apps have been removed by Google, but were promptly reactivated, according to a paidContent report. The illegal publisher?s app brings attention to Google?s bigger issue of dealing with determined app makers looking to exploit the Android Market. And for a developer like UKER, Google will have to take extra precautions in dealing with a potential competitor.

Google wants to be your personal media hub

Google has its own publishing arm, selling books for direct download through the Android Market. Not only is Google running a marketplace, but it?s leveraging its Android app hub to promote its own personal media services. Google?s grown the Android Market to include books, movies and music in recent months, looking to compete with Apple?s iTunes portal for digital media.

But even Apple finds it tough to balance its own publishing goals with the industry as a whole. Last week a group of Chinese writers brought a lawsuit against Apple for making their titles available through its stores without permission. It?s been an arduous journey for the publishing industry heading into the mobile world, fighting piracy issues similar to those the music and film industry have faced for several years.

TIME?s digital publishing promo

However, not everyone is having a negative experience with digital publishing. TIME, Inc. hopes to demonstrate its partnership potential with mobile platforms by giving away free downloads of all its titles at CES this year. With cross-device access, TIME?s promotion brought free access through an all-in-one subscription for Android smartphones and tablets, including the Kindle Fire. The publisher already has a longer-standing deal with NOOK, offering a free B&N tablet with a year-subscription for People magazine.

?

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tech/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/appolicious_rss/rss_appolicious_tc/http___www_androidapps_com_articles10773_illegal_books_on_android_compete_with_googles_market_plans/44196237/SIG=13b8mmt9q/*http%3A//www.androidapps.com/tech/articles/10773-illegal-books-on-android-compete-with-googles-market-plans

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Saturday, January 14, 2012

`Frenemies' take a fashion field trip in NYC (AP)

NEW YORK ? It goes with the teenage territory: Girls gush over their friends and each other's wardrobes.

But maybe that BFF should wear just a few more casual outfits. Right back at her with, "You should wear more skirts."

Hmmm, sounds like the "Frenemies" are at it.

A new Disney Channel movie called "Frenemies" debuts Friday night, casting real-life fashion fans and best buds Bella Thorne and Zendaya as style watchers who want to turn their blog Geekly Chic into a magazine.

Of course, their friendship is put to the test when they have to compete for the editor job. In the end, though, they go together like a pair of great shoes, doing their best work as a team.

Both girls star in the Disney Channel TV series "Shake It Up," where they play outfit-obsessed best friends who get a gig as background dancers on a local TV dance show.

Thorne is 14. Zendaya is 15; her last name is Coleman but she prefers a one-word name like Madonna or Beyonce. Zendaya doesn't really go anywhere without heels on, and one of Thorne's favorite outfits ever was a Betsey Johnson party dress with combat boots and funky socks.

Zendaya says she's learned a lot about shoes from her friend. Thorne is much more into music and dance thanks to Zendaya.

In an hour-long fashion field trip to an H&M store in Manhattan, the girls dreamed up new fashion-forward combos, described their signature looks, and listed must-have items for their purses (phones and headphones for both, but Zendaya also needs her lip gloss).

The girls say they wish they could swap clothes more often, but, alas, while they are cut from the same cloth, they are not the same size. Here are some other tidbits from their visit to H&M.

AP: What's your style?

Zendaya: I like to be dressed up. I'm pretty neutral, not very funky. I like neutral colors, and black and white. I need to wear more color. .., I could sit in the closet a long time and be very happy and think about what to wear. I have a definite interest. I study ads in fashion magazines, and I'll cover up the labels and guess if I know the designer. I quiz myself.

Thorne: I don't do a stylist because I like the unexpected. I will make up a whole outfit, picking the shoes first. ... I also really like leather.

AP: How would you describe each other's style?

Thorne: If I were going to buy something for myself, I'd get the hot pink, and I'd get the black for Zendaya. She's sophisticated.

Zendaya: Bella likes to mix it up. She'll wear frilly with studs.

AP: What would you like to see each other wear more of?

Zendaya: I would like to see her more casual, in jeans and some kick-back Converse.

Thorne: She never wears skirts. (To Zendaya:) You should wear more skirts. I'd love to see her in a bubble skirt and a comic T-shirt.

AP: Your biggest obsession?

Thorne: I love to shop shoes. I turned a room into my house into a closet ? I made it my shoe closet.

Zendaya: I have a closet full of blazers, and I love shoes. I wear the blazers with shorts, and then I'll try on all of my shoes.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tv/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120111/ap_en_tv/us_fea_fashion_frenemies

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Friday, January 13, 2012

Japan vows "concrete" steps to cut Iran oil reliance (Reuters)

TOKYO (Reuters) ? Japan pledged on Thursday to take concrete action to cut Iranian oil imports in response to an appeal for support from visiting U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, as Washington steps up efforts to sanction Tehran over its disputed nuclear program.

Geithner welcomed Tokyo's cooperation, an encouraging sign for U.S. foreign policy after China rebuffed U.S. sanctions aimed at starving Iran of the oil revenues that provide the country of 74 million people with vital economic support.

Iran faces the prospects of cutbacks in oil sales to its top buyers including China and Japan. The European Union, a major buyer, has committed to banning imports of Iranian oil.

Japan's Finance Minister Jun Azumi said Iranian crude makes up 10 percent of Japan's overall oil imports.

"We would like to take action concretely to further reduce (that) in a planned manner," he said after meeting Geithner.

"On the other hand, we need some time in non-crude oil related areas, so I asked the Secretary to take Japan's situation into consideration."

The Obama administration will be consulting with its various allies on the most effective way to enforce the sanctions, including significantly reducing Iranian crude imports, a U.S. official said.

Cutting Iranian crude imports would not be without risks for Japan. It relies on imports for its energy needs and has to import more fuel to make up for waning use of nuclear power following last year's nuclear power plant disaster in Fukushima.

"It would cause immense damage if they were cut to zero," Azumi said in a news conference, referring to Japan's Iranian oil imports.

Anxiety over Iran's nuclear program, which it says is not for military use, could also push up oil prices and harm the global economy.

Indeed, Japan's Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda voiced concern to Geithner about the potential impact of the U.S. sanctions on Japan and the world economy.

Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Osamu Fujimura, the government's top spokesman, later tried to soften Azumi's pledge to reduce Iranian oil imports, saying it was one of many options under consideration.

President Barack Obama authorized a law on December 31 imposing sanctions on financial institutions that deal with Iran's central bank, the country's main clearing house for oil payments.

Japan's government hopes to secure a waiver from the sanctions for Japanese banks by reducing Iranian crude imports, something it has started discussing this with the domestic oil industry, the Yomiuri newspaper reported.

However, sources at two major Japanese oil refiners using Iranian crude said they had not been approached by the government.

Azumi didn't elaborate on what he meant by "non-crude oil related areas," but one potential issue is its repeated intervention to weaken the yen to boost exports.

Azumi said he had meaningful discussions on currencies with Geithner, but declined to reveal the details. Geithner also declined to comment on Japan's intervention.

CUTTING OFF IRAN'S CENTRAL BANK

Geithner traveled to China and Japan this week to discuss the global economy and seek cooperation on stricter sanctions on Iran, an OPEC member and the world's fifth-largest crude exporter.

U.S. Deputy Secretary of Treasury Neal Wolin has visited Thailand and the Philippines to explain the new U.S. sanctions, emphasizing that countries can avoid them if they significantly reduce their oil imports from Iran.

Next week, Daniel Glaser, Treasury's assistant secretary for terrorist financing, and his counterpart at the State Department will be traveling to Japan and South Korea to discuss the best way to implement the sanctions, the U.S. official said.

Iran denies Western suspicions that its nuclear program has military goals, saying it is for purely peaceful purposes.

Washington has rejected Iran's assertion and has pressed ahead with new sanctions.

The latest law would freeze financial institutions that deal with Iran's central bank out of U.S. markets. The United States can waive some institutions if it deems it necessary for energy market stability or if the institutions' home country significantly reduces trade with Iran.

"We are exploring ways to cut Iran's central bank off from the global financial system. We are in the early stages of consulting with Japan and our other allies," Geithner said.

"We appreciate the support that Japan has provided."

Japan asked the United States to waive its banks in return for cutting Iranian oil imports, but Japan must decide how it will lower imports and then it is up to the U.S. government to debate whether a waiver will be granted, a Japanese finance ministry official told reporters.

Japan will present Washington with a "menu" of possible options in exchange for a waiver by the end of February, a government source told Reuters last week.

The tightening noose of U.S. sanctions has set off an Asian round of diplomacy with Middle East oil producers. Japan's Foreign Minister Koichiro Gemba asked OPEC kingpin Saudi Arabia and fellow cartel exporter, the United Arab Emirates, to supply the Asian buyer with more oil.

China's Premier Wen Jiabao will visit Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Qatar in a trip beginning this weekend. The prime minister of South Korea, another major buyer of Iranian crude, is due to visit the UAE and Oman from Friday.

China gave no hint on Wednesday of giving ground to U.S. demands to curb Iran's oil revenues, rejecting Washington's sanctions on Tehran as overstepping. Iran is China's third-largest crude supplier.

U.S. officials sounded more optimistic, saying they will focus more on China's actions than on its public statements.

However, China has reduced crude purchases from Iran for January and February in a dispute over contract-pricing terms.

India faces pressure to cut crude purchases from Iran, but policy and industry officials have sent mixed messages on future plans with one unnamed cabinet minister on Thursday saying the country would continue to do business with Tehran.

The European Union is more sympathetic to U.S. pressure on Iran. EU foreign ministers are expected to agree on a ban on imports of Iranian crude oil on January 23.

(Additional reporting by Osamu Tsukimori and Lucy Hornby and Rachelle Younglai in Washington; Editing by Tomasz Janowski, Ed Lane, Neil Fullick and Jan Paschal)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/japan/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120112/wl_nm/us_usa_geithner_japan

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For once, Romney fiery in speech after primary win (Reuters)

MANCHESTER, New Hampshire (Reuters) ? Republican Mitt Romney offered the starkest choice yet between himself and President Barack Obama on Tuesday in a New Hampshire primary victory speech that aides said set the tone for the rest of the campaign.

Romney gave perhaps the most dynamic speech of his campaign for the Republican presidential nomination, focusing almost exclusively on the economic record of Obama, the Democrat he wants to unseat from the White House in the November 6 election.

"We know that the future of this country is better than 8 or 9 percent unemployment. It is better than $15 trillion in debt. It is better than the misguided policies and broken promises of the last three years - and the failed leadership of one man," he said.

The strategy behind the speech, aides said, was both to offer a different vision than Obama's and to answer Republican voters' demands for a nominee who can take the fight to the president.

"When Barack Obama came to New Hampshire four years ago ... he promised to bring people together, he promised to change the broken system in Washington, he promised to improve our nation. Those were the days of lofty promises made by a hopeful candidate. Today, we're faced with the disappointing record of a failed president," Romney said.

It had the texture of a speech that Romney, as the nominee, might give during the general election campaign against Obama next autumn, even though Republicans in only two states have made their choices known thus far in the early days of 2012.

'RUN OUT OF IDEAS'

"The president has run out of ideas. Now, he's running out of excuses," said Romney. "And tonight, we are asking the good people of South Carolina to join the citizens of New Hampshire and make 2012 the year he runs out of time."

South Carolina's January 21 primary is the next contest in the Republican nomination race.

Whether Romney will be able to stay on message like he did on Tuesday is a big question.

His final day of campaigning on Monday was noteworthy for a self-inflicted wound in which he declared "I like being able to fire people" in talking about the need for competition between health insurance companies.

It played into a narrative put out by his Republican rivals that Romney was a job cutter during his time as a venture capitalist in the 1990s.

And Romney found himself on the defensive for saying he once feared getting fired from his former firm Bain Capital, where he

made his fortune.

"He leaves here wounded by a series of episodes that made it clear to voters - both in New Hampshire and for those watching across the country - that he is completely out of touch with the concerns of America's working and middle-class families," said Democratic National Committee chairwoman Debbie Wasserman-Schultz.

Romney aides were jubilant at Tuesday's results in a state where he lost four years ago to eventual Republican nominee John McCain. But they held back from declaring that the former Massachusetts governor appears to be on the path to the Republican presidential nomination.

They said Romney faces a tougher environment in South Carolina to outduel rivals who are gunning to be his conservative alternative in a conservative state where politics can get nasty.

Romney is to travel on Wednesday to South Carolina. He leads polls there but an outside group that wants Newt Gingrich to win is launching $3.4 million of ad buys in the state.

Gingrich's campaign in the past week has centered around tearing down Romney to avenge negative attacks from Romney forces against Gingrich in Iowa.

Conservatives Rick Santorum and Rick Perry want to make a stand in South Carolina as well.

"It'll be a tough, hard-fought battle in South Carolina because it's always a hard-fought battle in South Carolina," said Romney adviser Ron Kaufman, who said the New Hampshire victory should end the debate over whether Romney is a "weak front-runner" after his narrow Iowa win.

Another Romney adviser, former eBay CEO Meg Whitman, said Romney is geared toward a long campaign to win the nomination.

"Mitt's prepared to go the distance and his whole team is. so I think that's what we're planning on right now. If it ends earlier, great," she said.

(Reporting By Steve Holland; Editing by Will Dunham)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obama/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120111/pl_nm/us_usa_campaign_romney

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Thursday, January 12, 2012

Ali center part of legacy to his social activism

The Olympic torch Ali carried during the 1996 Opening Ceremonies of the Summer Games in Atlanta, Ga., on display Wednesday, Jan. 11, 2012 at the Muhammad Ali Center in Louisville, Ky. Visitors to the Muhammad Ali Center see the three-time world heavyweight champion in his prime, railing against war and racial inequity and delivering knockout punches in the ring. They also see the softer side of a man embracing ideals of respect and spiritual growth. (AP Photo/Brian Bohannon)

The Olympic torch Ali carried during the 1996 Opening Ceremonies of the Summer Games in Atlanta, Ga., on display Wednesday, Jan. 11, 2012 at the Muhammad Ali Center in Louisville, Ky. Visitors to the Muhammad Ali Center see the three-time world heavyweight champion in his prime, railing against war and racial inequity and delivering knockout punches in the ring. They also see the softer side of a man embracing ideals of respect and spiritual growth. (AP Photo/Brian Bohannon)

FILE - In this Nov. 19, 2005 file photo, Muhammad Ali poses for the cameras as he and his wife, Lonnie, left, arrive for a gala which marks the opening of the Muhammad Ali Center in Louisville, Ky. Ali made his fame with his fists, and his post-boxing legacy is being made at The Muhammad Ali Center. Ali and his wife have spent more than a decade raising the money to create, operate and fund the center, which opened in 2005 on their 19th wedding anniversary. (AP Photo/Garry Jones, File)

Visitors begin their tour of the life of Muhammad Ali on the fifth floor of the complex bearing his name Thursday, Jan. 12, 2012 at the Muhammad Ali Center in Louisville, Ky. Visitors to the Muhammad Ali Center see the three-time world heavyweight champion in his prime, railing against war and racial inequity and delivering knockout punches in the ring. They also see the softer side of a man embracing ideals of respect and spiritual growth. (AP Photo/Brian Bohannon)

FILE - In this Nov. 18, 2005 file photo, boxing great Muhammad Ali is accompanied by his wife Lonnie and singer Kris Kristofferson as he tours the Muhammad Ali Center in Louisville, Ky. Muhammad Ali made his fame with his fists, and his post-boxing legacy is being made at The Muhammad Ali Center. Ali and his wife have spent more than a decade raising the money to create, operate and fund the center, which opened in 2005 on their 19th wedding anniversary. (AP Photo/Ed Reinke, File)

Ben Physick of Austrailia watches the life of Muhammad Ali in video clips on display Thursday, Jan. 11, 2012 at the Muhammad Ali Center in Louisville, Ky. Visitors to the Muhammad Ali Center see the three-time world heavyweight champion in his prime, railing against war and racial inequity and delivering knockout punches in the ring. They also see the softer side of a man embracing ideals of respect and spiritual growth. (AP Photo/Brian Bohannon)

(AP) ? Muhammad Ali's fists made him famous, but his plight as a social activist was perhaps his biggest fight.

At the Muhammad Ali Center, visitors see the three-time world heavyweight champion railing against war, segregation and poverty. They also see the softer side of a man embracing spiritual growth.

On Saturday, the center will be in the limelight when Ali is surrounded by friends for a private party celebrating his 70th birthday. Having spent more than a decade raising money to create and operate the six-story center in downtown Louisville, Ali and his wife, Lonnie, are using the champ's latest personal milestone to benefit the 6-year-old complex.

The party, in a banquet room offering a sweeping view of the Ohio River, will double as a $1,000-per-person fundraiser for Ali's beloved center, where the boxer's words are inscribed throughout the exhibits.

Australian Ben Physick, who toured the center with his wife recently, said he was especially moved by Ali's pronouncement that he was put on the planet not to be a great boxer but to fight injustice and racism.

"It isn't just about boxing, it's about being a better person," Physick said.

The center traces Ali's remarkable life and the turbulent times that helped shape one of the world's most recognizable figures. Ali, who is battling Parkinson's disease, turns 70 on Tuesday.

"The Ali Center is a vessel for sharing Muhammad's legacy and championing his social significance," Lonnie Ali said Thursday in a statement to The Associated Press. "The center empowers people ? especially youth ? to create transformational change in the world."

Born as Cassius Marcellus Clay Jr. on Jan. 17, 1942, he grew up in a predominantly black West End neighborhood of Louisville.

He took up boxing at age 12, later becoming a top amateur boxer and Olympic gold medalist.

Ali, raised in a Baptist family, announced his conversion to the Muslim faith soon after defeating Sonny Liston in 1964 to win the heavyweight crown for the first time. He moved to Miami in the early 1960s but kept his close ties to Louisville, where he has a home today. The Alis also have homes in Michigan and Arizona.

The center showcases Ali's grace and power as a boxer with video replays of his most famous bouts and plenty of memorabilia, including a rhinestone-studded boxing robe, a gift from Elvis Presley.

Visitors can also shadowbox, punch a speed bag and lean into a heavy bag that lets them feel the power of an Ali punch.

The center focuses on Ali's causes outside boxing with a series of video, photograph and text displays. Ali envisions the center as a place to promote world understanding and peace.

"His legacy reaches so far beyond the ring," said Jeanie Kahnke, a center spokeswoman.

Though largely absent from the public eye now, Ali remains a powerful symbolic figure. Last year, Ali, along with other high-profile political dignitaries, backed efforts to free two American hikers held captive for more than two years in an Iranian prison. The hikers were eventually released.

The center, built around the accomplishments of someone who called himself "The Greatest," encourages visitors to reach their own potential by promoting six core values: respect, confidence, conviction, dedication, giving and spirituality.

That message still resonates today, Ali's wife said.

"Muhammad and I always envisioned an organization that would use Muhammad's life as a model to encourage people everywhere to 'keep their eyes on the prize,' to work hard to reach their potential and to achieve their dreams," Lonnie Ali said.

Muhammad Ali's social commentary is woven into the displays.

"There are lots of moments when you sort of get chills," said Physick, the Australian.

One display revives painful memories of segregation. It features a lunch counter and a gruff voice to mimic the experience of blacks who were denied seats. Ali was refused service at a Louisville restaurant after he returned home as a gold medal winner in the 1960 Olympics.

Other exhibits replay the turbulent 1960s and Ali's role as a civil rights supporter and opponent of the Vietnam War.

Ali was stripped of his boxing title in 1967 for refusing to go into the Army during the war, citing his religious beliefs.

His decision turned him into a polarizing figure, reviled by many in the U.S.

The center doesn't shy away from those days. One exhibit features a congressman's comments that Ali's decision was "an insult to every mother's son serving in the armed forces."

Ali, who was convicted of draft evasion, took his legal battle all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court, which in 1971 ruled in his favor.

The center has drawn visitors from more than 100 countries. Cases display the Presidential Medal of Freedom he received from President George W. Bush, and the torch that Ali carried at the opening of the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta.

"Some people have come to Louisville just to experience this," Kahnke said. "They've never been to the United States before. I think they feel like it's the closest thing to the champ that they'll ever get."

Physick, who lives in Sydney, was born two years before Ali's boxing career ended in 1981. He toured the center as part of a trip across the U.S.

In a way, Ali was a fixture in his boyhood home ? his brother had a life-size photo of Ali standing over a defeated opponent.

"The only reason we came to Louisville was to see the Ali Center," he said. "I think I could spend a whole day here."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2012-01-12-Ali%20Birthday-Ali%20Center/id-e2a9e7b6e17e44f9b35ebefab470bdfc

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Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Every Time I Die, Set Your Goals, Cancer Bats For European Tour

Hot off the announcement that they'll be releasing their sixth album 'Ex Lives' in March, Every Time I Die have announced a massive European tour.

With support coming from the likes of Set Your Goals, Cancer Bats and Make Do And Mend, the four band bill will hit up an extensive array of venues throughout mainland Europe.

MAY
01 Cologne Underground, Germany
02 Frankfurt Batschkapp, Germany
03 Stuttgart Universum, Germany
04 Zurich Abart, Switzerland)
05 Muinch Backstage Halle, Germany
06 Vienna Szene, Austria
08 Bratislava Randall Club, Slovakia
09 Prague Rock Caf?, Czech Republic
10 Schweinfurt Stattbahnhof, Germany
11 BEerlin Columbia Club, Germany
12 Copenhagen Pumphuset, Denmark
13 Stockholm Klubben, Sweden
14 Gothenburg Sticky Fingers, Sweden
15 Aarhus Train, Denmark
16 Hamburg Knust, Germany
17 Bremen Lagerhaus, Germany
18 Hannover Faust, Germany
19 Eindhoven Dynamo, Holland
21 Moscow Plan B, Russia
22 St Peterburg Arktika, Russia
23 Helsinki Nosturi, Finland

Source: http://www.thisisfakediy.co.uk/articles/news/every-time-i-die-set-your-goals-cancer-bats-for-european-tour

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